THE BUGS BUNNY & TWEETY SHOW


Written by Kevin McCorry
    "Overture, curtain, lights!
    This is it. The night of nights.
    No more rehearsing or nursing a part.
    We know every part by heart!
    (cane flip)
    Overture, curtain, lights!
    This is it. We'll hit the heights!
    And oh, what heights we'll hit!
    On with the show, this is it!
    (character procession)
    Tonight what heights we'll hit!
    On with the show, this is it!"
    "The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show."
In 1985, the network rights to Saturday morning television broadcast of Warner Brothers' cartoons in the United States transferred to ABC from CBS. CBS had been running the cartoons on its Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Hour (until 1978), then on its 90-minute or 2-hour Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Show (until 1985). Though the lengths of its installments changed from 60 minutes to 90 to 120 (in 1982-3) and back to 90 (for 1983-5), all other aspects of Bugs Bunny/Road Runner format remained in the main quite constant until 1984. Each episode had the opening on a stage. A curtain rose, to show Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck singing "This is It", accompanied by a procession of characters walking across the stage, and followed by a Road Runner song with rapid clips from various Road Runner cartoons.

For the final season (1984-5) of The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Show on CBS, the television series was overhauled and given an entirely new look. The familiar stage setting was dropped, and Bugs and Daffy did not sing "This is It". Instead, new graphics were introduced to blend into a series of fast cuts from such cartoons as "Knighty Knight Bugs" and "Freeze Frame", complimented by an appealing theme song which went as follows:

    "It's cartoon gold, for young and old.
    It's the Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Show.
    The Bugs is hot. The Coyote's not.
    And Road Runner's go, go, go!..."
Each character was introduced in the song and said his trademark line. The opening song would then finish with these lyrics:
    "And they go beep-beep-beep-beep-oom-bapa-mao-mao-bubba-bubba-bub-a-Bugs!
    The famous cartoon show's the only way to go.
    It's the Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Show!"
On all previous seasons of The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Show and on The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Hour, all cartoons were titled with a still image of Bugs, the Road Runner, or other characters on stage, or Sylvester peeking from behind a tree at a fleeing Tweety, etc.. Now, the same poses of the characters and the words of the cartoon titles were turned into moving graphics that left a blurry trail as they moved around the screen to eventually settle into a stationary position. Each cartoon was titled in a different way, with different graphic movements. Music accompanying this newly formatted cartoon titling, had also been changed to match the motifs in the opening song. The result was a new, likable, and always interesting style to a show that needed several breaths of fresh air.

When ABC acquired right to broadcast the cartoons in 1985, it transferred them to videotape so that edits for violence or for ethnically sensitive content could be seamlessly done (CBS' edits for violence involved clumsy splices to film prints). ABC retained CBS' new graphic titles for the individual cartoons, but combined them with the musical accompaniment that had been used prior to 1984 by CBS.


The cartoon, "Knighty Knight Bugs", as titled from 1984 to 1989 on the CBS and ABC television networks.

In 1985, ABC's first compilation series for the Warner Brothers cartoons was The Bugs Bunny/Looney Tunes Comedy Hour, which featured all characters except for Tweety and Speedy Gonzales. 13 episodes were produced, and they were run 4 times from September, 1985 to September, 1986.


Image of the titling for "Tweety and the Beanstalk" on The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show from 1986 to 1989.

For the 1986-7 television season, a decision was made to return Tweety to Saturday morning, possibly by popular demand. On September 13, 1986, The Bugs Bunny/Looney Tunes Comedy Hour was replaced by The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show.

Bugs Bunny & Tweety initially aired in 1986-7 on ABC on Saturdays at 12 P.M. Atlantic Time. In years thereafter, it was also transmitted by individual Canadian television stations, never on a national network basis, and often at the same time as ABC's broadcast, so that Canadian cable television systems could perform program substitution to remove American advertising on the ABC television network affiliates.

For a short time in 1987, The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show moved on ABC to 12:30. With its expansion to hour-long format in 1988, it aired consistently on ABC at 12 P.M. (except for an occasional Saturday when live sports coverage caused it to air an hour or two earlier), until summer in 1994, when it moved to 9 A.M. Atlantic Time. In following seasons, it moved to 10 A.M., then to 11 A.M., and then to 11:30 A.M.. Its airtime on ABC for its final season (1999-2000) was 12 P.M..


Bugs Bunny proposes a bounty of money in reward for mild temper on the part of Sam, Duke of Yosemite in "From Hare to Heir".

In 1986, avid followers of the Warner Brothers cartoons of directors Chuck Jones, Friz Freleng, and Robert McKimson were probably dismayed that their favorite Saturday morning television series had been reduced to a half-hour. The once-great 90-minute or 2-hour staple of CBS' Saturday morning cartoon fare had been turned by ABC into a measly 30-minute television show. The return of Tweety was cold comfort to viewers who saw their favorite cartoons reduced to what seemed a bare minimum, sitting beside such pap as The Flintstone Kids on ABC's late Saturday morning schedule.

The original opening for The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show was similar to that of The Bugs Bunny/Looney Tunes Comedy Hour. A voice-over announcer stated the name of the television show and mentioned some of its cartoon stars. The visuals began with a scene from "Pre-Hysterical Hare", wherein Bugs activates a film projector. With advanced video-matting techniques, the projector was caused to show on a screen a collage of clips from such cartoons as "From Hare to Heir" (with Yosemite Sam laughing as he steps out of a closet), from "The Million-Hare" (with Daffy Duck realizing that his motorboat has come apart), from "Canned Feud" (Sylvester laughing), from "Tweet and Sour" (with Sylvester clutching Tweety and running), and from "The Last Hungry Cat" (with Sylvester kissing Tweety).

4 cartoons were usually shown in each half-hour installment, and at least one of the cartoons was extensively edited for content or for time. The very first Bugs Bunny & Tweety, on September 13, 1986, contained "Knighty Knight Bugs", "Sandy Claws", a severely edited "Hare-Less Wolf", a clip from "Goldimouse and the Three Cats", and "Hyde and Go Tweet".

It seemed at that juncture that the format of this television series would be two Bugs Bunny cartoons and two Tweety cartoons per episode. But in Show 3, on September 27, 1986, there were 2 Bugs Bunny cartoons and only 1 Tweety. The other cartoon, "For Scent-imental Reasons", featured Pepe Le Pew. From here, ABC's intention seemed to involve reserving one cartoon per show for characters other than Bugs or Tweety. Many Sylvester cartoons without Tweety were seen in 1986-7, among them "Hoppy Daze", "Hoppy Go Lucky", "The Slap-Hoppy Mouse", "Dr. Jerkyl's Hide", and "D' Fightin' Ones". Foghorn Leghorn made appearances in "A Fractured Leghorn" and "Weasel While You Work", and Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog's cartoons, "Don't Give Up the Sheep", "Double or Mutton", and "A Sheep in the Deep", were also in the mix.

By December, expectations of consistency were again debunked as installments started airing without any Tweety cartoons in them. Show 14, on December 13, 1986, contained "Bewitched Bunny", "A Sheep in the Deep", "Dr. Jerkyl's Hide", and "Shiskabugs". Tweety returned a week later for a Christmas show featuring "Bugs Bunny's Christmas Carol", "Gift Wrapped", and "Portrait of the Artist as a Young Bunny". For the next two months, Tweety was only sporadically on the television show, in one instance appearing twice (in the January 24, 1987 installment containing "Hare Trimmed", "Trick or Tweet", "Hoppy Daze", and "Tweet, Tweet, Tweety") and in others not appearing at all. Only 25 half-hour shows were produced in the 1986-7 season, and they were repeated from March to September, 1987, with Show 1 airing three times! Moreover, some cartoons (e.g. "Hare Trimmed", "Hoppy Daze") were included twice in the 25 shows, while no Road Runner cartoons appeared.


First episode of the second season of The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show contained the cartoon, "Hoppy Daze", for which the titling looked like this.

The second season of Bugs Bunny & Tweety began on September 12, 1987. At first, it seemed as though all cartoons shown in this season would be repeats from the previous year. But by episodes 7 and 8, cartoons like "Devil's Feud Cake" and "Corn On the Cop", which had not been shown before on The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show, appeared. Happily, every installment in this season contained one Tweety cartoon, which seemed to find a niche as the fourth and final feature in each show. And Tweety cartoons unseen in the previous season, such as "A Street Cat Named Sylvester", "Ain't She Tweet", "Catty Cornered", "Canary Row", and "Birds Anonymous", were broadcast over the winter months. A string of Road Runner cartoons, including "Hopalong Casualty", "War and Pieces", and "Going! Going! Gosh!", also appeared over a period of 8 weeks in the same winter months. Whereas the 1986-7 season only had 25 shows, the 1987-8 season had 34. Other new-to-Bugs Bunny & Tweety cartoons that aired in 1987-8 were "Claws in the Lease", "Fish and Slips", "Stupor Duck", "Duck Amuck", "Mutiny On the Bunny", and "Wideo Wabbit".

Below are images of the titles for cartoons on The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show in its first two seasons.

In the summer of 1988, ABC decided to start broadcasting back-to-back two installments of The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show, so that Warner Brothers' cartoons again received 60 minutes of airtime. This was supposedly an experiment for an expanded, hour-long format for the television show, which was broadcast in the following season.

The new season of one-hour installments began on September 10, 1988. Most episodes contained 7 slightly edited, or 8 heavily edited, cartoons. Two Tweety cartoons were included in every installment, and several cartoons never before on The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show, among them "14 Carrot Rabbit", "Pop 'im Pop!", "Hot Cross Bunny", "My Bunny Lies Over the Sea", and "All Abir-r-rd", appeared in unedited, or nearly unedited, glory!

The first 4 episodes of the 1988-9 season used the then-familiar opening from the prior two seasons, but when show number 5 began on October 8, 1988, viewers received a very pleasant surprise! The television show started with clips from "What's Up, Doc?", "Home Tweet Home", "Hot Cross Bunny", "All Abir-r-rd", "Stupor Duck", "The Hasty Hare", "The Last Hungry Cat", "Person to Bunny", and "Long-Haired Hare" (some of these cartoons had not yet been seen on the show!), leading into the resurrected and stylishly reanimated "This is It" song, performed by Bugs and Daffy against a beautiful, violet-purple, neon-light background. A procession of characters (Tweety, Sylvester Jr., Hippety Hopper, Yosemite Sam, Sylvester, Elmer Fudd, the Road Runner, Wile E. Coyote, and Foghorn Leghorn) walked across the stage from right to left. A purple curtain would then close, with Bugs and Tweety emerging from behind it and Tweety waving to the audience as his top hat falls to completely engulf his head. This opening would be used for every Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show until September, 1992.


Character procession for the opening of The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show from 1988 to 1992.

Harkening back to the Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Show formula, this season of The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show had 26 installments, run from September, 1988 to March, 1989, and repeated from March to September, 1989. All cartoons retained their moving graphic titles introduced by CBS in 1984, and cartoons in many of the installments shared images, motifs, or themes with those in weeks immediately preceding or following. For instance, the monstrous bird from "I Was a Teenage Thumb" in Show 2 foreshadowed the Tweety monster in Show 3's "Hyde and Go Tweet", which was itself followed in Show 4 by Bugs Bunny's spooky encounter with the monstrous flying bat, the transformed Count Bloodcount, in "Transylvania 6-5000". Another example was Bugs Bunny's Boy Scout reference in "Bugs Bonnets" in installment 7, which was followed by the same reference in both "Hare Trimmed" and "Hot Cross Bunny" in Show 8, while the laboratory setting in "Hot Cross Bunny" in Show 8 was followed by Show 9's "Dr. Jerkyl's Hide".


An example of the cartoon titling format post-1989 on The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show.

The 1989-90 season contained the same batch of cartoons from 1988-9 shuffled into 26 new installments. By episode 10 of that season, the titles for all individual cartoons had been reformatted. With Bugs Bunny's fiftieth birthday approaching, there was a decision to replace the graphic moving titles initiated by CBS in 1984 with a new titling system. Consistent for every cartoon, the new process of titling showed a winding stretch of gold film, along which Bugs, dressed in a tuxedo and top hat and surrounded by the Warner Brothers concentric circles, arcs across the screen to reveal each cartoon's title. The music accompanying this was a shortened version of the original Looney Tune theme used at the start of each Looney Tune theatrical cartoon in the 1940s, 1950s, and early 1960s. Cartoons on The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show were titled in this way in all of the years from 1989 to 2000.

At the same time as this new cartoon titling system was introduced, the number of Tweety cartoons per installment dropped from two to one, though occasionally two would be seen. A new gimmick to the television show was "Comedy Classics", excerpts from particular cartoons to fill time at the end of the first half-hour of most 1989-90 installments. Bugs' "soft-shoe" dance with a "blackface" Colonel Shuffle in "Mississippi Hare", though deleted from the main ABC print of this cartoon, was shown as one of the "Comedy Classics". So too was the scene of Bugs feeding dynamite shish kabob to the Tasmanian Devil, an ABC-removed part of "Bill of Hare".

In 1990, one year after the passing of Mel Blanc, public interest in the Warner Brothers cartoons was rising. Bugs Bunny was celebrating his fiftieth birthday, and a prime-time television special was produced, in which various Hollywood celebrities expressed their love for the character. Perhaps in response to this increased interest, ABC decided to revamp its Warner Brothers cartoon compilation television series. When The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show returned for another season in September, 1990, several cartoons, many never before shown on Saturday morning network television, joined the Bugs Bunny & Tweety agglomeration of cartoon shorts. Show 1 of that season contained 7 new-to-Saturday-morning cartoons, including "Baton Bunny", "Duck Dodgers in the 24 1/2th Century", "Rabbit Rampage", and "Room and Bird".


Purple became a dominant color in the 1988-92 opening titles for Bugs & Tweety.

Format of the television show remained consistent in that 7 and sometimes 8 cartoons were telecasted each week, and every episode started with a Bugs Bunny cartoon and ended with a Tweety. Many of the more heavily edited cartoons from previous seasons were shuffled over to the Nickelodeon specialty television channel or to the new, weekday Merrie Melodies television series available in syndication, while ABC showed complete such cartoons as "Bunny Hugged", "Pizzicato Pussycat", "Bad Ol' Putty Tat", "Lumber Jack-Rabbit", "Feed the Kitty", "Hare Lift", "Hyde and Hare", "Foxy By Proxy", "Rabbitson Crusoe", "Knight-Mare Hare", "Hurdy-Gurdy Hare", "Operation: Rabbit", "Forward March Hare", and "Big Top Bunny".

Due to Gulf War coverage, The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show was not seen on January 26, 1991, and broadcast of the remaining installments for that season was pushed back a week, so that Show 1 was not repeated in March.

As was the case with the 1989-90 season, 1991-2 featured nothing but the same cartoons from the prior season (1990-1), and due to live coverage of the Clarence Thomas sexual harassment trial in October, 1991, the broadcast sequence of the 26-show season that year was disrupted.


The last of the proudly marching characters cross stage behind Bugs and Daffy in the post-1992 opening of The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show.

Bugs & Tweety was reformatted again in September, 1992. Its opening title sequence was reanimated, beginning with a woodland scene in which Bugs pulls Elmer Fudd's hunting hat over Fudd's face and "morphs" into Tweety, while Fudd pulls his hat off of his face and "morphs" into Sylvester, who chases Tweety, stumbles onto the ground, and "becomes" Wile E. Coyote. Wile E. collides with a tree and "transforms" into Daffy Duck, who receives a pie in the face before "morphing" into the Road Runner. The scene cuts to a stylized stage, adorned with "backdrops" from various cartoons, on which Bugs and Daffy, with unusually large flop-feet, sing "This is It". Pepe Le Pew and Porky Pig were added to the procession of characters who walk across the stage, while Hippety Hopper had been removed.

The 1992-3 season of The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show differed from all of those previous by featuring a Road Runner cartoon every week, including cartoons like "Sugar and Spies" and "Guided Muscle", which ABC's Saturday morning Warner Brothers cartoon series had never shown until this point in time. One Tweety cartoon was seen each week, but it no longer was necessarily the concluding feature in each show. Sometimes it was, but most of the time, it was not. Commercial breaks were more frequent. The transition between first and second cartoons in each show was the only between-cartoon point where a commercial break was not imposed. Many long-established Saturday morning cartoons, including "The Rabbit of Seville", "Piker's Peak", "Tweety and the Beanstalk", "Dr. Jerkyl's Hide", and "A Bird in a Guilty Cage", disappeared from the line-up, in favor of such new-to-Saturday morning cartoon shorts as "Who Scent You?" and "Mixed Master". Again, the season consisted of 26 installments, from September, 1992 to March, 1993, followed by 26 weeks of repeats from March, 1993 to September, 1993.

For the television season of 1983-4, the same collection of Warner Brothers cartoons allocated to ABC in 1992-3 were assembled into new installments. "Mad as a Mars Hare" was in two consecutive episodes in October and November, and some episodes were Tweety-less.

In the years after the 1993-4 season, quality of The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show plummeted. Cartoons on it underwent additional trimming, even for innocuous Oriental imitations (e.g. Tweety's in "Tweety and the Beanstalk", a cartoon which returned to the show in 1995), the first cartoon was no longer reliably a Bugs Bunny, and Tweety often disappeared for weeks on end. Starting in 1996, only 6 edited cartoons were run in an hour-long period, and the remaining airtime was filled with inane toy soldier animation, a double-dose of Schoolhouse Rock, and far too many commercials. Happily, though, long-unseen cartoons like "Tweety's Circus" and "Kit For Cat" were now shown on The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show.

Bugs Bunny & Tweety hit an unprecedented low when its 1997-8 season began in September, 1997. Coverage of Princess Diana's funeral preempted Bugs & Tweety on September 6, 1997, and preemptions also occurred on the two following weeks, so that ABC, clearly more committed to coverage of the Disney works to which it then owned telecast rights, could show Winnie the Pooh at an airtime earlier than originally scheduled due to afternoon football games on network affiliates. Though Bugs & Tweety finally began its 1997-8 season on September 27, 1997, preemptions for early broadcasts of Winnie the Pooh and other Disney offerings on ABC persisted, one week out of three, through the autumn months.

On January 3, 1998, Bugs & Tweety contained several cartoons unseen on ABC for several years, including "The Abominable Snow Rabbit", "Ali Baba Bunny", "By Word of Mouse", and "D' Fightin' Ones", as the offering of cartoons on ABC and Nickelodeon had been shuffled, which each broadcaster receiving rights to cartoons run on the other for the previous three years, and ABC's airings of Bugs & Tweety became consistent again. Cartoons never before on Bugs & Tweety were added to the show. These cartoons included "The Honey-Mousers", "Mice Follies", "Dime to Retire", "Beep Prepared", "Stop, Look, and Hasten", and "Chaser On the Rocks". Other cartoon shorts that had been completely missing from television for two or more years resurfaced on ABC, and among them were "Piker's Peak", "Terrier Stricken", "Hyde and Go Tweet", and "The Awful Orphan".

Consistency of transmission was to suffer again in the summer of 1998, when Bugs Bunny & Tweety was preempted four weeks in a row.

The 1998-9 season of The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show began on September 12, 1998, and loyal viewers were frustrated in the autumn months to find the show replaced by Winnie the Pooh one week out of three because of afternoon football and a rescheduling of Winnie the Pooh to an earlier airtime. Some pleasant surprises in the 1998-9 installments were the return to television of the long-A.W.O.L. "A Bird in a Guilty Cage" and the reacquisition by ABC from Nickelodeon of "Going! Going! Gosh!" and "Zip N' Snort".

1999-2000 was Bugs & Tweety's final season on ABC. On September 4, 1999, the show moved from its 11:30 A.M. airtime of 1998-9 to 12 P.M., and its length was reduced to a half-hour. Thus, The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show had come full circle. Many ABC affiliates dropped Bugs & Tweety in favor of local programming. So, for their last 12 months on ABC, the Warner Brothers cartoons received a very limited audience. Network preemptions were many in the autumn and early winter, but Bugs Bunny & Tweety's broadcasts stabilized to weekly, on the ABC affiliate stations still airing the show, in mid-winter and spring of 2000. Some interesting developments were the inclusion of the never-before-on-ABC "Boyhood Daze" in a special Bugs Bunny & Tweety 90-minute matinee in December, 1999 and the uncut airing of "Whoa Be-Gone!" in the March 11 installment.


The final seasons of The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show were of a blue and orange flourish in opening title presentation.

September 2, 2000 was the last day that The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show graced the transmissions of ABC. The cartoons in that final U.S. network television engagement for the Warner Brothers cartoons were "The Grey-Hounded Hare", "Tugboat Granny", and "Guided Muscle". Thereafter, for better or for worse, the American cable television specialty channel, Cartoon Network, gained exclusive broadcast rights to every Warner Brothers cartoon in existence.

The following is an episode guide for The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show's most definitive seasons, with full cartoon listings for the intervening years.


Charles M. Wolf, Blacque Jacque Shellacque, and Spike and Chester.
Season 1

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 1 (Sept. 13, 1986)
Premiere episode of Bugs & Tweety has bad ol' putty tat Sylvester trying to acquire Tweety on a beach flooded by a
succession of tidal waves and in the laboratory of a duplicitous doctor and Bugs reclaiming King Arthur's prized 
possession, the Singing Sword, from its thief, Black Knight Yosemite Sam, and flustering a forgetful wolf hunting a rabbit
for his shrewish wife to cook for their dinner.
"Knighty Knight Bugs" with Bugs Bunny, Yosemite Sam, and the Dragon
"Sandy Claws" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"Hare-Less Wolf" with Bugs Bunny and Charles M. Wolf
Clip from "Goldimouse and the Three Cats" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Goldimouse
"Hyde and Go Tweet" with Tweety and Sylvester

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 2 (Sept. 20, 1986)
Bugs and Daffy's Palm Springs vacation has an unexpected Tibetan detour; Tweety, in his cage on a Hawaiian beach, is 
protected from Sylvester by Granny's pet shark while Granny is at a luau; Bugs and bunny-hunter Elmer are the unaware 
subjects in a scientific analysis of behavior influenced by a variety of head garments; and a nanny in a park forestalls
Sylvester's aim to snatch and consume a certain canary.
"The Abominable Snow Rabbit" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and the Abominable Snowman
"Hawaiian Aye Aye" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"Bugs Bonnets" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd
"Home Tweet Home" with Tweety and Sylvester

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 3 (Sept. 27, 1986)
Bugs and Daffy are captured by the giant Elmer Fudd in a castle at the top of a tremendous beanstalk, the former escaping 
fe-fi-fo-fum Fudd's custody, the latter becoming the mechanism of Elmer's wristwatch. A bulldog, name of Spike, guards the
bird house wherein dwells Tweety, against the machinations of Sylvester, who utilizes the contents of an inventor's 
laboratory to produce some interesting but insufficient dog-foiling devices. Yosemite Sam schemes to marry wealthy widow
Granny for her money, and Bugs acts to stop his sworn enemy's evil enterprise.
"Beanstalk Bunny" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Elmer Fudd
"Tweet and Lovely" with Tweety and Sylvester
"For Scent-imental Reasons" with Pepe Le Pew
"Hare Trimmed" with Bugs Bunny, Yosemite Sam, and Granny

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 4 (Oct. 4, 1986)
Bugs and Yosemite Sam are at odds over property rights, Bugs accompanies Columbus on his 1492 voyage of discovery, and
Sylvester disguises himself as moving men and as a female dog in his schemes to gain access to the bulldog-guarded, new 
home of Tweety and Granny.
"The Fair-Haired Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Muzzle Tough" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"Hoppy Daze" with Sylvester and Hippety Hopper
"Hare We Go" with Bugs Bunny and Chris Columbus

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 5 (Oct. 11, 1986)
Yosemite Sam, Italiano pussycat Sylvester, and Ralph Wolf all high dive, Sam with guns in his hands, Sylvester wearing a 
bathing cap, and Ralph having garbed himself in scuba gear; Bugs is a Wild West carnival barker and a zoo keeper; and 
Tweety and Granny are tourists in Venice.
"High Diving Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"A Pizza Tweety Pie" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"Woolen Under Where" with Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog
"Bill of Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Tasmanian Devil

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 6 (Oct. 18, 1986)
Sylvester thinks that he is Buck Rogers; a pair of hillbillies square dance with each other in compliance with the 
violent, yokel lyrics sung by Bugs; Sam, Duke of Yosemite, hopes in vain to be awarded one million pounds for mild 
temperament as the host to Bugs; and baby kangaroo Hippety Hopper, in a storage crate within a dock warehouse, is mistaken
by Sylvester and by Sylvester's dimwit feline sidekick, Benny, for a giant mouse for which for Sylvester to fight and for
Benny to adopt as a pet.
"From Hare to Heir" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Dog Pounded" with Tweety and Sylvester
"Hoppy Go Lucky" with Sylvester, Benny Cat, and Hippety Hopper
"Hillbilly Hare" with Bugs Bunny and the Martin Brothers

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 7 (Oct. 25, 1986)
Modern technology fails to facilitate farmer Elmer Fudd's elimination of the rabbit raider of his carrot patch but does 
enable Tweety to fly outside of Granny's house without leaving the security of his bird cage, Foghorn Leghorn dons boxing
gloves to spar with his barnyard canine adversary who insulted "mother" Foghorn's presumed ostrich progeny, and Bugs 
tangles with (Yosemite) Sam Von Schamm, the Hessian, in opposing forts on an American Civil War battlefield.
"Robot Rabbit" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd
"The Jet Cage" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"Mother Was a Rooster" with Foghorn Leghorn
"Bunker Hill Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 8 (Nov. 1, 1986)
Road Runner replacement Bugs swallows ACME Super Speed Vitamins to elude the grasp of Wile E. Coyote and is rocketed to a
Martian space platform, where he prevents Marvin Martian from exploding a telescopically obstructive Earth. A guilty
conscience tortures Sylvester with quivering, compulsive pacing, nervousness, and sleeplessness, after the bad ol' putty
tat believes that he has at last eaten Tweety. Also, 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 sheep, but Ralph has an unpleasant surprise when his 
planned mutton feast removes its carcass to reveal a certain angry canine. 
"Hare-Breadth Hurry" with Bugs Bunny and Wile E. Coyote
"Double or Mutton" with Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog
"The Last Hungry Cat" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"Hare-Way to the Stars" with Bugs Bunny and Marvin Martian

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 9 (Nov. 8, 1986)
In this show: a Tasmanian adventure for Bugs, televisual frustration for attention-craving Daffy, snow and ice folly for
Foghorn Leghorn, and safety from Sylvester for Tweety on Granny's new chapeau.
"Bedevilled Rabbit" with Bugs Bunny and Tasmanian Devil
"A Bird in a Bonnet" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"Weasel While You Work" with Foghorn Leghorn and the Weasel
"This is a Life?" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Elmer Fudd, Yosemite Sam, and Granny

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 10 (Nov. 15, 1986)
For the inexcusable offenses of destroying Bugs' banjo, tangling Bugs in the strings of Bugs' harp, and tying Bugs' ears 
to a tree branch, an opera music singer incurs the wrath of Bugs- who is disguised as eminent conductor Leopold- in the
middle of the singer's much-heralded stage performance. Foghorn Leghorn and a cat combat each other to possess a worm as
food or as bait for food. The magic beans that spawn a legendary beanstalk do so beneath Sylvester's box of slumber, and
the putty tat, upon awakening, discovers a castle inhabited by giant-sized Tweety, an enormous bulldog, and their master-
the obligatory terrifying titan, who detests interloping felines.
"Long-Haired Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Giovanni Jones
"Tweety and the Beanstalk" with Tweety and Sylvester
"A Fractured Leghorn" with Foghorn Leghorn
"Duck! Rabbit! Duck!" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Elmer Fudd

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 11 (Nov. 22, 1986)
Tweety flees from Sylvester into an automat, down a ski slope, and onto a wooden bridge in Colorado, Bugs is the guest of
honor on Edward R. Murrow's Person to Person television show and humiliates hunter Elmer Fudd in an uproariously funny
stage performance of "The Barber of Seville", and Pepe Le Pew battles a shark in the waters of southern France, where the
lovelorn skunk believes that he has, in a white-paint-striped cat, found the mate of his dreams.
"The Rabbit of Seville" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd
"Tree Cornered Tweety" with Tweety and Sylvester
"Touche and Go" with Pepe Le Pew
"Person to Bunny" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Elmer Fudd

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 12 (Nov. 29, 1986)
The bleak terrain of Mars, an ocean liner, and a prison provide the settings for this show wherein Bugs is devolved into a
Neanderthal Rabbit by Marvin Martian's Time-Projector Gun, seasick Sylvester's bottle of mal-de-mer remedy is mixed with 
nitroglycerin by Tweety, a construction worker finds a frog that sings only for him, and a Sing Song Prison cell cannot 
hold Bugs, especially when Bugs' jailer is impetuous (Yosemite) Sam Schultz.
"Mad as a Mars Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Marvin Martian
"Tweety's S.O.S." with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"One Froggy Evening" with Michigan J. Frog 
"Big House Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 13 (Dec. 6, 1986)
Bugs wins in a Dawson City saloon squabble with gold claim usurper Blacque Jacque Shellacque, Sylvester and Tweety are 
involved in a retelling of the story of Little Red Riding Hood, Ralph Wolf cannot filch the sheep in Sam Sheepdog's care 
despite disguising himself as Greek god Pan with a flute to lull Sam to sleep, and Sylvester fights a "giant mouse" in an 
abandoned house.
"Bonanza Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Blacque Jacque Shellacque
"Don't Give Up the Sheep" with Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog
"Red Riding Hoodwinked" with Tweety, Sylvester, Granny, and the Big Bad Wolf
"The Slap-Hoppy Mouse" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 14 (Dec. 13, 1986)
Bugs avoids demise in the stews being prepared by the wicked witch in the story of Hansel and Gretel and by Middle Age 
royal cook Yosemite Sam, two cockney canines chase Sylvester into a laboratory where the thirsty cat mistakes a glass of
Hyde formula for soda pop, and Ralph Wolf, tied to balloons, flies above Sam Sheepdog's lambs with intention of grabbing
one of the woolly foodstuffs, but Sam pea-shoots projectiles to burst each of the balloons.
"Bewitched Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Witch Hazel
"A Sheep in the Deep" with Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog
"Dr. Jerkyl's Hide" with Sylvester, Spike, and Chester
"Shiskabugs" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 15 (Dec. 20, 1986)
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 # 16 (Jan. 3, 1987)
Bugs battles a horned beast, Sylvester descends to the infernal abode of a mythological figure of similar facial
protrusions after losing one of his nine lives in a plummet from a building top to where he had chased Tweety, and German
World War I aerial combatant Yosemite Sam "Von Schamm", following an explosive "dogfight" defeat by Allied flyer Bugs,
becomes a diabolical angel. 
"Bully For Bugs" with Bugs Bunny and the Bull
"Satan's Waitin'" with Tweety and Sylvester
"Mouse-Taken Identity" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper
"Dumb Patrol" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 17 (Jan. 10, 1987)
Charlie Dog annoys a Southern Colonel with repeated proposals that he be the Colonel's canine companion, despite the 
Colonel's extant loyal pet bulldog, Belvedere; Bugs withstands a construction worker's efforts with dynamite, cement, and
heavy weight to remove Bugs' rabbit hole from the path of a planned freeway; Three Little Pigs, in expectation of the Big
Bad Wolf's assault upon their dwellings of straw and wood, sell these houses to an unwitting Bugs, whose ire is raised to
vengeful heights when the Big Bad Wolf's destructive breath reduces Bugs' new abodes to rubble; and Sylvester and a 
bulldog are handcuffed-together fugitives from Animal Control.
"No Parking Hare" with Bugs Bunny and the Construction Worker
"D' Fightin' Ones" with Sylvester and Bulldog
"Dog Gone South" with Charlie Dog and Colonel Shuffle
"The Windblown Hare" with Bugs Bunny and the Big Bad Wolf

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 18 (Jan. 17, 1987)
Bugs burrows by mistake to Transylvania, where he meets a vampire who is metamorphically susceptible to the magic words 
and phrases adroitly spoken by Bugs, Tweety and Granny's tour of the world is punctuated by the canary capture ploys of 
their uninvited traveling companion, Sylvester, and Claude Cat's happy home becomes a war zone when he is introduced by 
his human owners to his new rival for their affections- the sudden barking Frisky Puppy. 
"The Million-Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck
"Trip For Tat" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"Two's a Crowd" with Claude Cat and Frisky Puppy
"Transylvania 6-5000" with Bugs Bunny and Count Bloodcount

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 19 (Jan. 24, 1987)
River water is the object of conflict between Bugs and Blacque Jacque Shellacque; Sylvester discovers Tweety in the 
display window of an after-business-hours department store, enters the store through its mailbox, and stalks the canary
through the ladies' fashions, toys, and sporting goods sections; a friendly extraterrestrial's peaceable visit to Earth is
greeted with hysterical fear by the indigenous people of the somewhat mildewed and smoggy planet; and Bugs is targeted for
stew pot fodder by two famished hobos aboard the Chattanooga Choo-Choo.
"Wet Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Blacque Jacque Shellacque
"A Bird in a Guilty Cage" with Tweety and Sylvester
"Martian Through Georgia" with the Friendly Alien
"Half Fare Hare" with Bugs Bunny, Ralph Kramden, and Ed Norton

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 20 (Jan. 31, 1987)
Tweety's use of barbed wire fastened to his nesting tree or pole repels the gastronomic advances of Sylvester, matrimony-
for-money is Yosemite Sam's Bugs-opposed scheme when he learns that Granny has inherited 50 million dollars, and Sylvester
is pep-talked by a fellow feline into proving his mettle as a potential "champeen mouser"- and has not a chance of success
in this regard when he is confronted by a baby kangaroo thought by him to be a giant mouse.
"Hare Trimmed" with Bugs Bunny, Yosemite Sam, and Granny
"Trick or Tweet" with Tweety and Sylvester
"Hoppy Daze" with Sylvester and Hippety Hopper
"Tweet, Tweet, Tweety" with Tweety and Sylvester

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 21 (Feb. 14, 1987)
Ferocious animals, the Tasmanian Devil and a black panther, break free of captivity and, respectively, bother carrot-
roasting Bugs and wound both body and pride of a belligerent bulldog. Taz and Yosemite Sam both try unsuccessfully to cook
Bugs in a stew pot. In addition, Claude Cat falls into a vat of hot bath water, is "pickled" in a fish bowl and in a water
cooler, and is dragged by a string through stair supports, vase handles, kitchen sink faucets, and a tea kettle and then
pulled by the same string onto a diving platform to an empty swimming pool, when he endeavors in vain to eradicate his 
startling barking nemesis, Frisky Puppy.
"Bill of Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Tasmanian Devil
"Terrier Stricken" with Claude Cat and Frisky Puppy
"Tree For Two" with Sylvester, Spike, and Chester
"Shiskabugs" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 22 (Feb. 14, 1987)
Claude Cat and Sylvester are both in desperate need of psychiatric help, Sylvester recounting for his "head doctor" 
several self-esteem-undermining failures to capture Tweety. Bugs also reminisces about his past experiences, as teller of 
tales intended to amuse an Arab prince. Finally, an inebriated, feathered bringer of a baby gorilla to expectant parents
loses his tiny bundle and selects Bugs as a replacement for the infant simian, and the father ape is violently agitated 
by the rabbit son that he neither wants nor loves.
"Hare-Abian Nights" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Tweet Dreams" with Tweety and Sylvester
"Mouse Wreckers" with Claude Cat, Hubie, and Bertie
"Apes of Wrath" with Bugs Bunny and the Drunken Stork

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 23 (Feb. 21, 1987)
Tweety is in a tugboat, Sylvester is hired to be a ship's resident mouse-catcher, Bugs outwits Elmer's rabbit-destructor
mechanism, and a pair of rustics are compelled by obedience to the square dance lyrics sung by Bugs to enact violence 
against one another.
"Robot Rabbit" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd
"Tugboat Granny" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"Cats A-Weigh" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper
"Hillbilly Hare" with Bugs Bunny and the Martin Brothers

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 24 (Feb. 28, 1987)
Bugs' aria in the role of "The Barber of Seville", an inebriated and exhausted stork opting to deliver a baby mouse to Mr.
and Mrs. Sylvester Cat, a skunk amorously chasing a cat of accidentally white-painted back up a mountain, and a television
show imparting to Elmer Fudd's faithful dog a cynical view of humanity constitute phenomena of this show.
"The Rabbit of Seville" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd
"A Mouse Divided" with Sylvester and the Drunken Stork
"A Mutt in a Rut" with Elmer Fudd and Rover the Dog
"A Scent of the Matterhorn" with Pepe Le Pew

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 25 (Mar. 7, 1987)
Bugs rescues Teutonic tots from the cannibalistic wiles of a wicked witch, defeats French-Canadian outlaw Blacque Jacque
Shellacque in a card game in a Yukon saloon, and bests Baron (Yosemite) Sam Von Schamm in aerial combat in World War I,
and Sylvester's chase of Tweety on Granny's farm brings him into conflict with Granny's bulldog and an aggressive rooster.
"Bewitched Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Witch Hazel
"Bonanza Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Blacque Jacque Shellacque
"Fowl Weather" with Tweety, Sylvester, Granny, and Hector Bulldog
"Dumb Patrol" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam

The Abominable Snowman, Little Red Riding Hood and the Big Bad Wolf, and Rupert Dog.
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

Giant, Count Bloodcount, and Michigan J. Frog.
Season 3
ABC expanded The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show to an hour in the summer of 1988 by broadcasting two back-to-back episodes. Some of the cartoon combinations during this period were interesting, including three cartoons, "Duck Dodgers and the Return of the 24 1/2th Century", "Little Boy Boo", and "Hyde and Go Tweet", connected by a huge, shaggy monster (Gossamer and the transformed Tweety) and a chemical set and a laboratory in "Little Boy Boo" and "Hyde and Go Tweet" respectively, in the second installment on July 23, 1988. ABC's interest in compiling peculiar Bugs & Tweety shows was more evident in the 1988-9 season, in which most hour-long episodes contained seven classic shorts. Commonalities between the component cartoons of each of the 26 shows in 1988-9 will be enumerated, along with mention of the connections between cartoons in adjacent episodes.

The season's inaugural show featured "Bunker Hill Bunny", "Tweet and Lovely", "What's Up, Doc?", "Hare We Go", "Heaven Scent", "14 Carrot Rabbit", and "Home Tweet Home". Boats are a common image for "Hare We Go" and "Heaven Scent", and city parks are seen in "What's Up, Doc?" and "Home Tweet Home". The fenced yard in which Tweety's birdhouse is situated in "Tweet and Lovely" is similar in structure to the forts of "Bunker Hill Bunny". Elmer Fudd proposes an acting partnership to Bugs in "What's Up, Doc?", Bugs and Chris Columbus are exploratory collaborators in "Hare We Go", and Yosemite Sam ingratiates himself to Bugs with an expedient 50:50 gold-prospecting partnership in "14 Carrot Rabbit". Spain is shown in "Hare We Go", and a Spanish city is referenced in Show 2's "The Rabbit of Seville".

Show 2 contained "Hare-Breadth Hurry", "A Scent of the Matterhorn", "Birds Anonymous", "The Rabbit of Seville", "I Was a Teenage Thumb", "Spaced-Out Bunny", and "Satan's Waitin'". Mountainous settings are shared by Show 1's "Heaven Scent" and "14 Carrot Rabbit" and this episode's "A Scent of the Matterhorn". Pepe Le Pew rises from snow on the mountain in "A Scent of the Matterhorn" and calls himself the Abominable Snowman, and Hugo, the Abominable Snowman, appears as Marvin Martian's stooge in "Spaced-Out Bunny". The devil dog prodding Sylvester to continue mortally chasing Tweety in "Satan's Waitin'" is the flip side to the "Birds Anonymous" orange cat that tries to prevent Sylvester from succumbing to bird-craving. A giant fish swallows most of Wile E. Coyote in "Hare-Breadth Hurry", and there are comparable events in "I Was a Teenage Thumb" (Tom Thumb falls into the mouth of a huge fish in King Arthur's lake) and Show 3's "Sandy Claws" (Sylvester is the victim of an extraordinarily sized mackerel). Knighthood in "I Was a Teenage Thumb" connects with Show 3's "Knighty Knight Bugs". Also, the "monstrous bird" that by its foot snags Tom Thumb foreshadows Tweety's transformed state of "Hyde and Go Tweet" in Show 3. And the sheep providing the wool for Mrs. Thumb's knitting of booties is another image trying this episode with its successor, whose contents include "Woolen Under Where". Although "I Was a Teenage Thumb" was a rarity on ABC, its use in this instance linked to many cartoons in a coinciding show.

Show 3's featured cartoons were "Dr. Devil and Mr. Hare", "Woolen Under Where", "Hyde and Go Tweet", "Devil May Hare", "Knighty Knight Bugs", "Hare-Way to the Stars", and "Sandy Claws". The connection between "Dr. Devil and Mr. Hare" and "Hyde and Go Tweet" is obvious. "Hyde and Go Tweet" and "Sandy Claws" have been close companions many times, probably because of the swallowing of Sylvester by the Tweety monster and by the large fish. In both "Hyde and Go Tweet" and "Hare-Way to the Stars", huge birds grow from exposure to a liquid, Hyde formula in the former case and water in the latter. Ralph Wolf's knight suit in "Woolen Under Where" foreshadows "Knighty Knight Bugs". Yosemite Sam and the dragon in "Knighty Knight Bugs" are blasted into space, their castle becoming a rocket, which accords with Bugs' space-rocket situation in "Hare-Way to the Stars".

Show 4 consisted of "Transylvania 6-5000", "Little Beau Pepe", "A Pizza Tweety Pie", "The Windblown Hare", "Pop 'im Pop!", "Lovelorn Leghorn", and "Tweet Dreams". Horror stories are the source material for the monstrous flying things of Show 3's "Hyde and Go Tweet" and this show's "Transylvania 6-5000" (Count Bloodcount's bat form). "A Pizza Tweety Pie" and the previous episode's "Sandy Claws" both involve settings with excesses of water. A circus appears in both "Pop 'im Pop!" and Sylvester's flashback to "Tweety's Circus" in "Tweet Dreams". Moreover, carnival music plays while the Big Bad Wolf is twirling on a clothes-drying spindle in "The Windblown Hare".

The cartoons in Show 5 were "Portrait of the Artist as a Young Bunny", "Little Boy Boo", "Tree Cornered Tweety", "Devil's Feud Cake", "Hippety Hopper", "Dog Gone South", and "A Street Cat Named Sylvester". There are retrospective narratives by Bugs and by Tweety in "Portrait of the Artist as a Young Bunny" and "Tree Cornered Tweety". Foghorn's quest in "Little Boy Boo" for warm winter quarters is comparable to Tweety's seeking of shelter from a snowstorm in "A Street Cat Named Sylvester". Chemicals are mixed by Egghead Jr. in "Little Boy Boo", and medicines are combined by Tweety in "A Street Cat Named Sylvester". Footage of lions from "Roman Legion-Hare" in "Devil's Feud Cake" curiously follows the use of scenes, though none of the lion, from "Tweety's Circus" in Show 4's "Tweet Dreams".

"Bully For Bugs", "I Gopher You", "The Last Hungry Cat", "Martian Through Georgia", "Long-Haired Hare", "Mutiny On the Bunny", and "A Bird in a Guilty Cage" were Show 6's cartoons. Hunted fugitives are common to "The Last Hungry Cat", in which Sylvester believes himself to be "The Cat", pursued by police for "murdering" Tweety, and "Martian Through Georgia", wherein a friendly alien visitor to Earth is jailed, escapes his prison cell, and is sought for recapture by all Earth law enforcement agencies. Charlie Dog kisses a cow in Show 6's "Dog Gone South", Bugs fights a bull in this installment's "Bully For Bugs", and Daffy sells a prized cow for beans in "Beanstalk Bunny" in the next episode. The quarrel between Bugs and Yosemite Sam over the Captain's hat in "Mutiny On the Bunny" and Sylvester's headdress-testing scene in "A Bird in a Guilty Cage" accord with the next show's "A Bird in a Bonnet" and "Bugs Bonnets". Sylvester swallows an explosive substance in "A Bird in a Guilty Cage", and Yosemite Sam does this too, in Show 7's "The Fair-Haired Hare". "Bully For Bugs" and "Long-Haired Hare" were together in the same installment of the initial season of The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Hour.

Show 7's cartoons included "Beanstalk Bunny", "The Fair-Haired Hare", "A Bird in a Bonnet", "High Diving Hare", "Bugs Bonnets", "No Parking Hare", "Hare-Less Wolf", and "Trick or Tweet". Right to property is contested by Bugs and another character (Daffy, Yosemite Sam, the construction worker) in "Beanstalk Bunny", "The Fair-Haired Hare", and "No Parking Hare". In the first two of these cartoons, Bugs' bed and Sam's house are thrust skyward by the sprouting beanstalk and by a huge TNT blast. Planks are seen in "High Diving Hare" and "Hare-Less Wolf", and although they are cut from both cartoons, scenes of Bugs as an Indian are common to "High Diving Hare" and "Bugs Bonnets". The absent-minded lupus of "Hare-Less Wolf" and Sylvester's friend, Sam, in "Trick or Tweet" are two slow-witted antagonists. The force of Charles M. Wolf's fall in "Hare-Less Wolf" causes Bugs to nearly fall off of his plank; correspondingly, Tweety is almost jerked out of his pole-top nest by the effect of Sylvester and Sam's plummet to ground.

Show 8 contained "Hot Cross Bunny", "Hare Trimmed", "Ain't She Tweet", "My Bunny Lies Over the Sea", "Wild Over You", "Dog Gone People", and "All Abir-r-rd". Three cartoons with Boy Scout references by Bugs, "Bugs Bonnets", "Hot Cross Bunny", and "Hare Trimmed", connect Shows 7 and 8. Moreover, Bugs imitates a judge with a gavel in "My Bunny Over the Sea", recalling his hat-induced judge behavior in Show 7's "Bugs Bonnets" and the decree by the judge in "The Fair-Haired Hare" in Show 7 that Bugs and Sam live under the same roof, a predicament comparable to Elmer Fudd's with Rupert Dog in this episode's "Dog Gone People". The wildcat of "Wild Over You", Rupert's drinking of a mood-altering substance, bay rum, in "Dog Gone People", and the laboratory of "Hot Cross Bunny" are all precursors to Show 9's "Dr. Jerkyl's Hide". Trains are shared images between this episode's "All Abir-r-rd" and the next show's "Compressed Hare" (Wile E.'s super-magnet attracts a train, among other things).

Show 9 featured "One Froggy Evening", "Dr. Jerkyl's Hide", "Muzzle Tough", "Compressed Hare", "Hoppy Go Lucky", "Terrier Stricken", and "Tweety and the Beanstalk". Sylvester is sleeping when first seen in "Dr. Jerkyl's Hide", "Muzzle Tough", and "Tweety and the Beanstalk", and in each of these cartoons, Sylvester is confronted by a grey bulldog. Michigan J. Frog's tendency to sing in the sole presence of the construction worker and then revert to normal frog demeanor when in view of the disbelieving eyes of others is rather like the situation of "Dr. Jerkyl's Hide" wherein only Alfie sees and is thrashed and slashed by the Sylvester monster; whenever little Chester looks, he sees only the normal Sylvester. Consequently, the veracity of both the construction worker and Alfie is disputed. The "One Froggy Evening" construction worker has the same physique as the moving men in "Muzzle Tough".

The cartoons in Show 10 were "Knights Must Fall", "Mother Was a Rooster", "Canary Row", "Bewitched Bunny", "Cats A-Weigh", "The Hole Idea", and "Tugboat Granny". Bugs challenges Sir Pantsalot of Dropseat Manor to a duel in "Knights Must Fall", slapping Pantsalot with Pantsalot's own metal glove, while Foghorn Leghorn issues a challenge of combat (in a boxing ring) to the barnyard dog, striking the dog's face with his baseball glove, in "Mother Was a Rooster". Granny and Tweety are at the controls of a streetcar and a tugboat in "Canary Row" and "Tugboat Granny" respectively. Bugs' gagging after having eaten Witch Hazel's tainted carrot recalls Sylvester's reaction to Jerkyl's concoction prior to his wildcat transformation in the previous episode's "Dr. Jerkyl's Hide". The little mouse chased by Sylvester in "Cats A-Weigh" becoming a powerhouse after eating vitamins is reminiscent of the super-strong fly in "Dr. Jerkyl's Hide" under the effect of the drops of Hyde formula. Another "echo" of "Dr. Jerkyl's Hide" is Prof. Calvin Q. Calculus' laboratory in "The Hole Idea".

Show 11's seven cartoons were "Sahara Hare", "Robin Hood Daffy", "Catty Cornered", "What's Opera, Doc?", "Mad as a Mars Hare", "Piker's Peak", and "Tweet, Tweet, Tweety". Yosemite Sam cuts down trees blocking his slingshot passage into the fortress occupied by Bugs in "Sahara Hare", and Daffy attempts the same solution to his arboreal obstruction problem in "Robin Hood Daffy". Tree-cutting recurs in "Tweet, Tweet, Tweety" when Sylvester tries to chop through the tree containing Tweety's nest. A Germanic motif connects the Wagnerian Opera antics of "What's Opera, Doc?" with the jovial Teutonic town of "Piker's Peak"- and also with Hansel and Gretel of Show 10's "Bewitched Bunny". Crime is a theme shared by Show 10's "The Hole Idea" (the portable hole theft and subsequent robbery spree) and this installment's "Catty Cornered" (Tweety's kidnaping by Rocky). Tweety hatches out of an egg in "Tweet, Tweet, Tweety", and Bugs' infancy is recollected in Show 12's "This is a Life?".

Eight cartoons in Show 12 included "This is a Life?", "A Mouse Divided" (with a Sylvester-and-Tweety title card), "Hawaiian Aye Aye", "Dumb Patrol", "Touche and Go", "Shiskabugs", "Hoppy Daze", and "The Jet Cage". The German references of Shows 10 and 11 continue in this episode's World War I adventure, "Dumb Patrol". Aerial pursuit connects "Dumb Patrol" with "The Jet Cage". Beaches and sharks are shared elements of "Hawaiian Aye Aye" and "Touche and Go". Bugs mentions a stork in "This is a Life?", and there is a drunken stork in "A Mouse Divided". Boats or ships are seen in "This is a Life?", "Hawaiian Aye Aye", and "Touche and Go".

Show 13's contents were "Bedevilled Rabbit", "Mouse Wreckers", "Fowl Weather", "Bonanza Bunny", "The Slap-Hoppy Mouse", "Big House Bunny", "Don't Give Up the Sheep", and "Tweety's S.O.S.". A bottle of iron glue appears in "Mouse Wreckers", one of the means by which Hubie and Bertie achieve the upside-down room effect, and in "The Slap-Hoppy Mouse" as part of Sylvester's faltering scheme to trap Hippety Hopper. Yosemite Sam is apprehended by the King's guards in Show 12's "Shiskabugs" and is jailed in this episode's "Big House Bunny". Claude Cat gulps down his nerve tonic in "Mouse Wreckers" quite like Sylvester frantically drinks his seasickness remedy in "Tweety's S.O.S.", another cartoon involving a ship, thus continuing the trend of Show 12. A cartoon with Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog is the second-to-last feature in this and the next two shows.

Show 14 consisted of "The Million-Hare", "Two's a Crowd", "Red Riding Hoodwinked", "Pre-Hysterical Hare", "Bill of Hare", "Apes of Wrath", "Double or Mutton", and "Dog Pounded". Fairy tales involving a little girl, Little Red Riding Hood and Little Bo Peep, are spoofed or referenced in "Red Riding Hoodwinked" and "Double or Mutton". Jungles are common as settings in Show 13's "Bedevilled Rabbit" and this episode's "Pre-Hysterical Hare" and "Apes of Wrath".

Show 15 contained "Robot Rabbit", "A Fractured Leghorn", "Tweet and Lovely", "Duck! Rabbit! Duck!", "Freudy Cat", "Weasel While You Work", "A Sheep in the Deep", and "Trip For Tat". Capricious or inept mechanical contraptions appear in "Robot Rabbit" and "Tweet and Lovely". "Robot Rabbit" and "A Fractured Leghorn" are located on a farm, and so too is "Weasel While You Work", whose winter action connects with the snowbound woodland of "Duck! Rabbit! Duck!" and the ski scene in "Trip For Tat". Bugs pretends to be an angel in "Duck! Rabbit! Duck!", and Sylvester in "Tweet and Lovely" has angel's wings after being the victim of his own explosive device.

The Christmas episode, Show 16, featured "Bugs Bunny's Christmas Carol", "Hillbilly Hare", "Tree Cornered Tweety", "From Hare to Heir", "Duck Dodgers and the Return of the 24 1/2th Century", "Tree For Two", and "Gift Wrapped". The reason for the incidence of the first and last cartoons in this episode is obvious. In "Duck Dodgers and the Return of the 24 1/2th Century", Daffy "Duck Dodgers", looking at the malevolent device being primed by Marvin Martian, asks the alien what other gadgets that he has received for Christmas. A pajamaed Yosemite Sam, wanting to go to sleep, is tormented by Bugs in both "Bugs Bunny's Christmas Carol" and "From Hare to Heir". Show 15's "Trip For Tat" and this installment's "Tree Cornered Tweety" share ski and wooden bridge gags.

Show 17's contents were "Mississippi Hare", "The Foghorn Leghorn", "Home Tweet Home", "The Abominable Snow Rabbit", "Corn On the Cop", "Hare We Go", and "Satan's Waitin'". Constables Daffy and Porky's attempt to cross from building to building on a doomed-to-collapse, makeshift wooden suspension bridge in "Corn On the Cop" is reminiscent of Sylvester's identical failure to reach Tweety in a neighboring building in "Tree Cornered Tweety" in Show 16. Bugs is a passenger on a boat in "Mississippi Hare" and "Hare We Go". Bugs removes sheets from a trunk to do his ghost act in Show 16's "Bugs Bunny's Christmas Carol", and the barnyard dog is inside a trunk being pushed by Henery Hawk in "The Foghorn Leghorn" in this episode.

Show 18 consisted of "Wet Hare", "For Scent-imental Reasons", "Birds Anonymous", "Person to Bunny", "A Mutt in a Rut", "Prince Varmint", "Mouse-Taken Identity", and "A Bird in a Guilty Cage". Recalling "Satan's Waitin'" in the previous show is a scene in "A Mutt in a Rut" in which Rover looks at Elmer's picture and imagines devil horns on Fudd's head. The "game" of sandwich proposed by Sylvester to Tweety in "A Bird in a Guilty Cage" precedes the "Hyde and Go Tweet" scene of Tweety transforming to monster from between two slices of bread, in the next show. Television programs cause problems for Elmer in both "Person to Bunny" and "A Mutt in a Rut".

Show 19's cartoons included "14 Carrot Rabbit", "Hare-Abian Nights", "Sandy Claws", "The Rabbit of Seville", "Bunker Hill Bunny", "Spaced-Out Bunny", and "Hyde and Go Tweet". About the only noticeable connections in this seemingly incongrous assembly of cartoon shorts are the continuing close relationship between "Sandy Claws" and "Hyde and Go Tweet" and the monstrous Abominable Snowman and transformed Tweety of the final two cartoons. Also, Bugs taps the back of the Snowman, and the transmuted Tweety, with his obscenely long fingers, first gains Sylvester's attention by the same method.

Show 20 was comprised of these 7 cartoons: "A-Lad-in His Lamp", "Little Boy Boo", "Tweet Dreams", "Hare-Breadth Hurry", "A Scent of the Matterhorn", "Hare-Way to the Stars", and "A Pizza Tweety Pie". The shaking bottle of Hyde formula from which the Tweety monster grows in Show 19's "Hyde and Go Tweet" compares with Aladdin's Lamp's jarring and jittering prior to the appearance therefrom of Smoky the Genie in "A-Lad-in His Lamp". Egghead Jr.'s chemistry set in "Little Boy Boo" also aptly follows the prior episode's "Hyde and Go Tweet". The correspondence between the liquid-born monster-birds in "Hyde and Go Tweet" and "Hare-Way to the Stars", first noted by the appearance of these two cartoons in Show 3, is repeated here in coinciding episodes 19 and 20. Camels are shared images of Show 19's "Hare-Abian Nights" and this episode's "Tweet Dreams" (Sylvester's recollection of "Tweety's Circus"). Possibly the most cogent connection between episodes 19 and 20 is the inclusion of two cartoons ("Hare-Abian Nights", "A-Lad-in His Lamp") located in the Arabia region.

"The Windblown Hare", "Heaven Scent", "A Street Cat Named Sylvester", "Dr. Devil and Mr. Hare", "Woolen Under Where", "Portrait of the Artist as a Young Bunny", and "The Last Hungry Cat" composed Show 21. Questionable medical care is administered by Tweety and by Bugs upon Sylvester and the Tasmanian Devil respectively in "A Street Cat Named Sylvester" and "Dr. Devil and Mr. Hare". Psychiatry arises in Show 20's "Tweet Dreams" and this installment's "Dr. Devil and Mr. Hare". Bugs recounts his youth in "Portrait of the Artist as a Young Bunny" and, posing as a psychiatrist, asks that the Tasmanian Devil do the same in "Dr. Devil and Mr. Hare".

Show 22 contained "Devil May Hare", "Lovelorn Leghorn", "Trick or Tweet", "Knighty Knight Bugs", "Pop 'im Pop!", "Little Beau Pepe", and "A Bird in a Bonnet". Bursting of either a bubble gum bubble or a balloon stops the ascent of the Tasmanian Devil, Sylvester, and slow-witted alley cat Sam in "Devil May Hare" and "Trick or Tweet", and "A Bird in a Bonnet". Foghorn Leghorn mentions Miss Prissy's blue bonnet in "Lovelorn Leghorn", an obvious correspondence to "A Bird in a Bonnet". A throbbing, protruding heart, caused by rapture or fright, is seen from Pepe's aphrodisiac-affected female in "Little Beau Pepe" and from Sylvester after a narrow-miss with street traffic. This was a Valentine's Day show, with romantic content in "Devil May Hare" (i.e. the Tasmanian Devil's marriage), "Lovelorn Leghorn", and "Little Beau Pepe". Camels, those of a circus and of the Sahara Desert, connect "Pop 'im Pop!" and "Little Beau Pepe", two cartoons that were both also in Show 4.

Show 23 was composed of "Transylvania 6-5000", "Dog Gone South", "Ain't She Tweet", "What's Up, Doc?", "Wild Over You", "D' Fightin' Ones", and "All Abir-r-rd". Trains are elements of "Dog Gone South", "What's Up, Doc?", "D' Fightin' Ones", and "All Abir-r-rd". A vampire and a wildcat, two menaces of the monstrous, appear in "Transylvania 6-5000" and "Wild Over You".

Show 24 featured "Devil's Feud Cake", "I Gopher You", "Muzzle Tough", "The Fair-Haired Hare", "Hippety Hopper", "Beanstalk Bunny", and "Tweety and the Beanstalk". The commonality between the last two cartoons in this episode is anything but subtle. Property rights, and also the skyward elevation of Bugs' bed and Yosemite Sam's house, in "Beanstalk Bunny" and "The Fair-Haired Hare", has already been noted in the instance in Show 7 of these cartoons being transmitted together. Granny and Tweety and Yosemite Sam move into new domiciles, with all of their furniture being unloaded from a moving van, in "Muzzle Tough" and "The Fair-Haired Hare". Explosive growth of the Goofy Gophers' vegetables from their dehydrated state accords with the sudden sprouting of beanstalks in the concluding pair of cartoons.

Show 25's seven contents were "High Diving Hare", "Terrier Stricken", "Canary Row", "Mutiny On the Bunny", "Cats A-Weigh", "Dog Gone People", and "Tugboat Granny". Claude Cat is hurled onto a diving board and falls into an empty swimming pool in "Terrier Stricken", and a diving act is the basis of conflict between Bugs and Yosemite Sam in "High Diving Hare". Boats or ships are common to "Mutiny On the Bunny", "Cats A-Weigh", and "Tugboat Granny".

Show 26 included "Sahara Hare", "Long-Haired Hare", "Catty Cornered", "Bully For Bugs", "Hoppy Go Lucky", "The Hole Idea", and "Tweet, Tweet, Tweety". There are no new correspondences between cartoons in this episode. Tree-cutting recurs as a connecting thread to "Sahara Hare" and "Tweet, Tweet, Tweety", as does crime to "Catty Cornered" and "The Hole Idea". "Long-Haired Hare" and "Bully For Bugs", first together in Show 24 of The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Hour and again in one episode (Show 6) of this season of Bugs & Tweety, also appeared here in the same installment. In both of these cartoons, Bugs acts alone, with "showman" aplomb in an auditorium or arena, to quash an overweening and disagreeable foe.

Further notes about Bugs & Tweety in 1988-9. Though in ABC's package of cartoons for this season, "Half Fare Hare" was not shown in any of the twenty-six installments from September, 1988 to March, 1989, but it was used in a special, summer, 1989 repackaging of Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show cartoon shorts in tribute to Mel Blanc, who died in July of that year. Other cartoon shorts to which ABC had rights to broadcast, including "Lighter Than Hare", "To Hare is Human", "The Hasty Hare", "Tweety's Circus", "Kit For Cat", "Who's Kitten Who?", and "The Leghorn Blows at Midnight", were unwaveringly withheld from 1988 to 1994, 1995, or even 1998! "Lighter Than Hare" never was in an episode of Bugs & Tweety and was only used for quick clips for season previews.

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 1 (Sept. 10, 1988)
Bugs participates in two events in American history: the voyage of Columbus in 1492 and the Battle of Bagel Heights in 
1776. He also remembers his ascension to Hollywood celebrity status and grapples with gold-claim-jumper Yosemite Sam in 
the Klondike. A bulldog assists Tweety against Sylvester in a fenced yard and in a city park.
PART ONE
"Bunker Hill Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Tweet and Lovely" with Tweety and Sylvester
"What's Up, Doc?" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd
PART TWO
"Hare We Go" with Bugs Bunny and Chris Columbus
"Heaven Scent" with Pepe Le Pew
"14 Carrot Rabbit" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Home Tweet Home" with Tweety and Sylvester

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 2 (Sept. 17, 1988)
Substituting for the Road Runner in evading Wile E. Coyote, performing opera music as the barber of Elmer Fudd, and 
outwitting his otherworldly would-be captor, Marvin Martian, comprise Bugs' deeds of this show. Pepe Le Pew climbs a 
mountain in pursuit of his beloved feline of accidental white paint stripe, the legendary Tom Thumb becomes most esteemed
knight to King Arthur, and Sylvester cannot resist the urge to pursue Tweety, even when his lives depend upon a policy of
canary-consumption abstinence.
PART ONE
"Hare-Breadth Hurry" with Bugs Bunny and Wile E. Coyote
"A Scent of the Matterhorn" with Pepe Le Pew
"Birds Anonymous" with Tweety and Sylvester
PART TWO
"The Rabbit of Seville" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd
"I Was a Teenage Thumb" with Ralph K. Merlin and Tom Thumb
"Spaced-Out Bunny" with Bugs Bunny, Marvin Martian, and the Abominable Snowman
"Satan's Waitin'" with Tweety and Sylvester

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 3 (Sept. 24, 1988)
Bugs foils the voracious appetite of the Tasmanian Devil in a jungle medical facility and in an American woodland, bests
Yosemite Sam in a Middle Ages struggle over possession of a legendary sword, and defeats the plan of Marvin Martian to 
obliterate planet Earth; Tweety repeatedly undergoes changes into a Mr. Hyde bird and thereby scares the wits out of 
Sylvester; and Ralph Wolf constructs the ultimate Sam Sheepdog-destroying apparatus but did not expect the inopportune 
blowing of the five o'clock whistle.
PART ONE
"Dr. Devil and Mr. Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Tasmanian Devil
Clip from "Cat's Paw" with Sylvester and Sylvester Jr.
"Woolen Under Where" with Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog
"Hyde and Go Tweet" with Tweety and Sylvester
PART TWO
"Devil May Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Tasmanian Devil
"Knighty Knight Bugs" with Bugs Bunny, Yosemite Sam, and the Dragon
"Hare-Way to the Stars" with Bugs Bunny and Marvin Martian
"Sandy Claws" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 4 (Oct. 1, 1988)
Bugs meets Transylvanian Count Bloodcount and the Big Bad Wolf and the Three Little Pigs in this episode also 
distinguished by cartoons set in Italy, the Sahara Desert, and the office of an animal psychiatrist. Miss Prissy is
resolved to find for herself a husband- and selects Foghorn Leghorn in this regard.
PART ONE
"Transylvania 6-5000" with Bugs Bunny and Count Bloodcount
"Little Beau Pepe" with Pepe Le Pew
"A Pizza Tweety Pie" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
PART TWO
"The Windblown Hare" with Bugs Bunny and the Big Bad Wolf
"Pop 'im Pop!" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper
"Lovelorn Leghorn" with Foghorn Leghorn and Miss Prissy
"Tweet Dreams" with Tweety and Sylvester

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 5 (Oct. 8, 1988)
Bugs remembers his youth, Foghorn Leghorn courts Miss Prissy, whose love he needs for warmth during a cold winter, 
Yosemite Sam goes to hell and will be granted freedom from eternal damnation if he can force Bugs to replace him as 
devil's servant in Hades, Charlie Dog proposes a pet-and-master relationship to an uninterested and fiery Southern 
Colonel, and Tweety uses Dragnet-style prose to describe Sylvester's chase of him from a big city to a wooden bridge in
the Colorado Rockies.
PART ONE
"Portrait of the Artist as a Young Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd
"Little Boy Boo" with Foghorn Leghorn, Miss Prissy, and Egghead Jr.
"Tree Cornered Tweety" with Tweety and Sylvester
PART TWO
"Devil's Feud Cake" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Hippety Hopper" with Sylvester and Hippety Hopper
"Dog Gone South" with Charlie Dog and Colonel Shuffle
"A Street Cat Named Sylvester" with Tweety, Sylvester, Granny, and Hector Bulldog

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 6 (Oct. 15, 1988)
Vexing and vanquishing a vainglorious soprano, provoking and pummeling a belligerent bull, and inciting a one-rabbit 
mutiny on Shanghai Sam's ship are Bugs' heroic deeds of this installment. Also, Sylvester wrongly believes that he has
eaten Tweety and suffers an attack of guilty conscience, the Goofy Gophers enter a food processing factory in search of 
the "vandals" who confiscated their vegetables, and a friendly creature from another world visits Earth and encounters 
nothing but frightened hysteria from the populace of this primitive planet.
PART ONE
"Bully For Bugs" with Bugs Bunny and the Bull
"I Gopher You" with the Goofy Gophers
"The Last Hungry Cat" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
PART TWO
"Martian Through Georgia" with the Friendly Alien
Clip from "Pappy's Puppy" with Sylvester and Butch J. Bulldog
"Long-Haired Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Giovanni Jones
"Mutiny On the Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"A Bird in a Guilty Cage" with Tweety and Sylvester

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 7 (Oct. 22, 1988)
Bugs finds a gigantic Elmer Fudd at the top of a beanstalk and with Elmer is an unwitting subject of study in the 
behavioral effects of constantly changing headgear, is in contention with Yosemite Sam over right to property and over who
is to perform a high diving act, and halts the plan of a brawny construction worker to dynamite his humble hole home for
the building of a freeway in that location. Sylvester cannot grab Tweety from the canary's new perch in the hat worn by
Granny and is, in competition with another putty tat, unable to grasp Tweety from a nest at the top of a pole.
PART ONE
"Beanstalk Bunny" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Elmer Fudd
"The Fair-Haired Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"A Bird in a Bonnet" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
PART TWO
"High Diving Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Bugs Bonnets" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd
"No Parking Hare" with Bugs Bunny and the Construction Worker
"Hare-Less Wolf" with Bugs Bunny and Charles M. Wolf
"Trick or Tweet" with Tweety and Sylvester

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 8 (Oct. 29, 1988)
Test specimen in an experimental laboratory theatre and Scottish golf competitor constitute some the capacities of Bugs in
this show, Pepe Le Pew romantically pursues a white-paint-striped wildcat, and Sylvester is confounded by bulldogs in his
quest for a Tweety dinner.
PART ONE
"Hot Cross Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and the Bespectacled Doctor
"Hare Trimmed" with Bugs Bunny, Yosemite Sam, and Granny
"Ain't She Tweet" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
PART TWO
"My Bunny Lies Over the Sea" with Bugs Bunny and Angus McCrory
"Wild Over You" with Pepe Le Pew
"Dog Gone People" with Elmer Fudd and Rupert Dog
"All Abir-r-rd" with Tweety and Sylvester

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 9 (Nov. 5, 1988)
This episode's phenomena: a singing frog, a fierce, monster Sylvester, Tweety and Granny's new, intercity home, Wile E.
Coyote's powerful, giant magnet, a dopey cat yearning for a pet "giant mouse", a hyperactive, barking puppy, and a 
towering growth of green stalk leading to a castle inhabited by a giant Tweety and his foul-tempered master.
PART ONE
"One Froggy Evening" with Michigan J. Frog
"Dr. Jerkyl's Hide" with Sylvester, Spike, and Chester
"Muzzle Tough" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
PART TWO
"Compressed Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Wile E. Coyote
"Hoppy Go Lucky" with Sylvester, Benny Cat, and Hippety Hopper
"Terrier Stricken" with Claude Cat and Frisky Puppy
"Tweety and the Beanstalk" with Tweety and Sylvester

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 10 (Nov. 12, 1988)
Bugs is challenged to a medieval duel and confronts Witch Hazel to rescue Hansel and Gretel from her cannibalistic 
clutches, Foghorn Leghorn believes himself to be the mother of a baby ostrich, Sylvester and his son work as mouse-
evictors aboard a ship, a portable hole is a tool in a criminal's plunder of an American city, and Tweety eludes Sylvester
in a San Francisco edifice and aboard a tugboat.
PART ONE
"Knights Must Fall" with Bugs Bunny and Sir Pantsalot of Dropseat Manor
"Mother Was a Rooster" with Foghorn Leghorn
"Canary Row" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
PART TWO
"Bewitched Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Witch Hazel
Clip from "Lighthouse Mouse" with Sylvester and Hippety Hopper
"Cats A-Weigh" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper
"The Hole Idea" with Calvin Q. Calculus
"Tugboat Granny" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 11 (Nov. 19, 1988)
Daffy is an unconvincing Robin Hood, and Yosemite Sam fails to forcibly enter Bugs' castle-fortress on the hot Sahara 
sands, but Sylvester succeeds in spite of himself and his canary-ingestion urge, in removing Tweety from detention by the
nefarious mobster, Rocky. Bugs also finds himself on the desolate surface of Mars and in a moody melodrama of Wagnerian
Opera, and Sylvester hatches Tweety out of an egg in the midst of a National Forest.
PART ONE
"Sahara Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Robin Hood Daffy" with Daffy Duck and Porky Pig
"Catty Cornered" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Rocky
PART TWO
"What's Opera, Doc?" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd
Clip from "Too Hop to Handle" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper
"Mad as a Mars Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Marvin Martian
"Piker's Peak" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Tweet, Tweet, Tweety" with Tweety and Sylvester

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 12 (Nov. 26, 1988)
Bugs battles Yosemite Sam in World War I and avoids becoming the meal presented to a bossy medieval monarch by cook Sam, 
Sylvester cannot achieve his aim of Tweety capture in the Hawaiian islands and is unable to serve as loving father to a 
baby mouse placed in his care by an inebriated stork, and Pepe Le Pew braves deep water and a shark in his chase of a cat
whose back has been accidentally striped white.
PART ONE
"This is a Life?" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Elmer Fudd, Yosemite Sam, and Granny
"A Mouse Divided" with Sylvester and the Drunken Stork
Clip from "Bad Ol' Putty Tat" with Tweety and Sylvester
"Hawaiian Aye Aye" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
PART TWO
"Dumb Patrol" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Touche and Go" with Pepe Le Pew
"Hoppy Daze" with Sylvester and Hippety Hopper
"Shiskabugs" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"The Jet Cage" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 13 (Dec. 3, 1988)
Tasmania, Dawson City, and Sing Song Prison are on Bugs' itinerary for this show, and Sylvester stalks Tweety on a farm 
and on a passenger ship and with his son enters a disused and in disrepair, mouse-infested house in an effort to prove his
continuing prowess as a "great mouser". Ralph Wolf cannot filch the sheep in Sam Sheepdog's care despite disguising 
himself as Greek god Pan with a flute to lull Sam to sleep.
PART ONE
"Bedevilled Rabbit" with Bugs Bunny and Tasmanian Devil
"Mouse Wreckers" with Claude Cat, Hubie, and Bertie
"Fowl Weather" with Tweety, Sylvester, Granny, and Hector Bulldog
PART TWO
"Bonanza Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Blacque Jacque Shellacque
"The Slap-Hoppy Mouse" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper
"Big House Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Don't Give Up the Sheep" with Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog
"Tweety's S.O.S." with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 14 (Dec. 10, 1988)
Bugs and Daffy race to a television studio, the first one of them to arrive there to be the winner of a Million Box,
Claude Cat resorts to increasingly destructive tactics in trying to eliminate fellow house pet Frisky Puppy, Sylvester and
Tweety are involved in a retelling of the story of Little Red Riding Hood, and Bugs witnesses film footage of his
prehistoric ancestor and escapes brutish tirades of a gorilla and of the pier-invading Tasmanian Devil.
PART ONE
"The Million-Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck
"Two's a Crowd" with Claude Cat and Frisky Puppy
"Red Riding Hoodwinked" with Tweety, Sylvester, Granny, and the Big Bad Wolf
PART TWO
"Pre-Hysterical Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd
"Bill of Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Tasmanian Devil
"Apes of Wrath" with Bugs Bunny and the Drunken Stork
"Double or Mutton" with Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog
"Dog Pounded" with Tweety and Sylvester

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 15 (Dec. 17, 1988)
Robots prove to be trouble for Bugs and Sylvester, Foghorn Leghorn arrogantly bellows once too often to the cat with whom
he is in conflict over possession of a worm and indulges in some wintertime frolic while a rooster-meat-craving weasel
plots his placement in a stew pot, and Sylvester journeys around the world on the trail of a vacationing Tweety and 
Granny.
PART ONE
"Robot Rabbit" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd
"A Fractured Leghorn" with Foghorn Leghorn
"Tweet and Lovely" with Tweety and Sylvester
PART TWO
"Duck! Rabbit! Duck!" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Elmer Fudd
"Freudy Cat" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper
"Weasel While You Work" with Foghorn Leghorn and the Weasel
"A Sheep in the Deep" with Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog
"Trip For Tat" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 16 (Dec. 24, 1988)
A Christmas show highlighted by a Looney Tune adaptation of Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol and including the 
tumultuous yuletide at the home of Granny, Bugs' stay as a wilfully annoying houseguest in the castle of Sam, Duke of 
Yosemite, and Daffy "Duck Dodgers" venturing to an egg-shaped meteor to acquire the valuable Rack and Pinion Molecule.
PART ONE
"Bugs Bunny's Christmas Carol" with Bugs Bunny, Yosemite Sam, Porky Pig, Tweety, Sylvester, Pepe Le Pew, Elmer Fudd, and 
Foghorn Leghorn
"Hillbilly Hare" with Bugs Bunny and the Martin Brothers
"Tree Cornered Tweety" with Tweety and Sylvester
PART TWO
"From Hare to Heir" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Duck Dodgers and the Return of the 24 1/2th Century" with Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, Gossamer, and Marvin Martian
"Tree For Two" with Sylvester, Spike, and Chester
"Gift Wrapped" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 17 (Dec. 31, 1988)
Bugs plays poker with a Southern Colonel on a Mississippi river boat and joins Christopher Columbus to sail the ocean 
blue, Tweety flees Sylvester in a city park and in a carnival, Daffy and Porky are police constables entrusted to maintain
law and order on Halloween night, and Foghorn Leghorn swaggers around a barnyard, affirming his roosterhood to an 
inexperienced, pint-sized chicken hawk.
PART ONE
"Mississippi Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Colonel Shuffle
"The Foghorn Leghorn" with Foghorn Leghorn and Henery Hawk
Clip from "Bad Ol' Putty Tat" with Tweety and Sylvester
"Home Tweet Home" with Tweety and Sylvester
PART TWO
"The Abominable Snow Rabbit" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and the Abominable Snowman
"Corn On the Cop" with Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, and Granny
"Hare We Go" with Bugs Bunny and Chris Columbus
Clip from "Bell Hoppy" with Sylvester and Hippety Hopper
"Satan's Waitin'" with Tweety and Sylvester

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 18 (Jan. 7, 1989)
Bugs combats a river-damming French-Canadian scoundrel, a Viking Yosemite Sam, and Daffy Duck- who imposes upon a 
televised interview with Bugs, Elmer Fudd's faithful dog believes that Elmer has sinister intentions where he is 
concerned, and Sylvester tries to catch and feast on Tweety in their own home and in a department store.
PART ONE
"Wet Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Blacque Jacque Shellacque
"For Scent-imental Reasons" with Pepe Le Pew
"Birds Anonymous" with Tweety and Sylvester
PART TWO
"Person to Bunny" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Elmer Fudd
"A Mutt in a Rut" with Elmer Fudd and Rover the Dog
"Prince Varmint" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Mouse-Taken Identity" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper
"A Bird in a Guilty Cage" with Tweety and Sylvester

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 19 (Jan. 14, 1989)
Bugs tangles with Yosemite Sam on an American Civil War battlefield, in the Klondike, and in an Arabian palace. Sylvester
endeavors to grab Tweety on the sands of a beach buffeted by tidal waves and in a laboratory belonging to Dr. Jekyll and
Mr. Hyde. In addition, Bugs meets a giant man of snow on Marvin Martian's native soil.
PART ONE
"14 Carrot Rabbit" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Hare-Abian Nights" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Sandy Claws" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
PART TWO
"The Rabbit of Seville" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd
"Bunker Hill Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Spaced-Out Bunny" with Bugs Bunny, Marvin Martian, and the Abominable Snowman
Clip from "A Street Cat Named Sylvester" with Tweety, Sylvester, Granny, and Hector Bulldog
"Hyde and Go Tweet" with Tweety and Sylvester

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 20 (Jan. 21, 1989)
An arm-flailing genie transports Bugs Bunny to Baghdad for a harrowing confrontation with a violently greedy sheik, 
Sylvester visits an animal psychologist, Pepe Le Pew is in the French Alps for his usual pursuit of an accidentally white-
striped girl cat, and Foghorn Leghorn desires winter warmth from Miss Prissy but cannot equally match wits with her genius
son.
PART ONE
"A-Lad-in His Lamp" with Bugs Bunny and Smoky the Genie
"Little Boy Boo" with Foghorn Leghorn, Miss Prissy, and Egghead Jr.
"Tweet Dreams" with Tweety and Sylvester
PART TWO
"Hare-Breadth Hurry" with Bugs Bunny and Wile E. Coyote
"A Scent of the Matterhorn" with Pepe Le Pew
"Hare-Way to the Stars" with Bugs Bunny and Marvin Martian
"A Pizza Tweety Pie" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 21 (Jan. 28, 1989)
Bugs effects retribution against Three Little Pigs who sold to him houses of straw and wood doomed to demolition by the
Big Bad Wolf's bluster. He also remembers his childhood and in the guise of Sigmund Freud asks of the Tasmanian Devil to
do the same. Pepe Le Pew amorously stalks a cat with a white back-stripe in France, Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog are 
roommates after their daily deeds as foes in a lamb-inhabited meadow, and Sylvester tries to hide unexpected houseguest
and prospective dinner Tweety from mistress Granny and undergoes psychological torture when he believes that he has
finally digested the canary whose flesh he has for so long desired.
PART ONE
"The Windblown Hare" with Bugs Bunny and the Big Bad Wolf
"Heaven Scent" with Pepe Le Pew
Clip from "Too Hop to Handle" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper
"A Street Cat Named Sylvester" with Tweety, Sylvester, Granny, and Hector Bulldog
PART TWO
"Dr. Devil and Mr. Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Tasmanian Devil
"Woolen Under Where" with Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog
"Portrait of the Artist as a Young Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd
"The Last Hungry Cat" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 22 (Feb. 4, 1989)
Deflecting the appetite of the Tasmanian Devil to other denizens (albeit phoney) of the animal kingdom and retrieving the
legendary Singing Sword from illicit possession by Black Knight Yosemite Sam constitute Bugs' exploits of this episode,
Sylvester contends with a baby kangaroo escaped from a circus and with a fellow alley cat who like him wishes to acquire
Tweety from a nest atop a pole, and Miss Prissy and Pepe Le Pew both desire a bonding with a member of the opposite sex.
PART ONE
"Devil May Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Tasmanian Devil
"Lovelorn Leghorn" with Foghorn Leghorn and Miss Prissy
"Trick or Tweet" with Tweety and Sylvester
PART TWO
"Knighty Knight Bugs" with Bugs Bunny, Yosemite Sam, and the Dragon
"Pop 'im Pop!" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper
"Little Beau Pepe" with Pepe Le Pew
"A Bird in a Bonnet" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 23 (Feb. 11, 1989)
Bugs, Charlie Dog, and Tweety and Sylvester ride trains in a show featuring cartoons located in Transylvania, the American
South, Hollywood, Granny's canine compound, and a French zoological exhibition of 1900.
PART ONE
"Transylvania 6-5000" with Bugs Bunny and Count Bloodcount
"Dog Gone South" with Charlie Dog and Colonel Shuffle
"Ain't She Tweet" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
PART TWO
"What's Up, Doc?" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd
"Wild Over You" with Pepe Le Pew
"D' Fightin' Ones" with Sylvester and Bulldog
"All Abir-r-rd" with Tweety and Sylvester

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 24 (Feb. 18, 1989)
Yosemite Sam and Tweety and Granny begin occupancy of their new homes, the Goofy Gophers hope to regain their vegetables
that have been transferred to a food processing factory, Bugs and Daffy and Sylvester are at tops of beanstalks and 
pursued by giants, and a mouse forms a pact with baby kangaroo Hippety Hopper to create a feline inferiority complex.
PART ONE
"Devil's Feud Cake" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"I Gopher You" with the Goofy Gophers
"Muzzle Tough" with Sylvester, Tweety, and Granny
PART TWO
"The Fair-Haired Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Hippety Hopper" with Sylvester and Hippety Hopper
"Beanstalk Bunny" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Elmer Fudd
"Tweety and the Beanstalk" with Tweety and Sylvester

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 25 (Feb. 25, 1989)
Claude Cat labors for one goal- the elimination of Frisky Puppy, Elmer has a canine houseguest who believes himself to be
human and expects to be treated as such, Sylvester and Sylvester Jr. are hopeful shipboard mice eradicators, and Bugs is
irreverently and not for long beneath the yolk of slavery imposed by sea vessel Captain Shanghai Sam. Also, Sylvester
stalks Tweety in San Francisco and on a river cruised by Tweety in Granny's tugboat.
PART ONE
"High Diving Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Terrier Stricken" with Claude Cat and Frisky Puppy
"Canary Row" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
PART TWO
"Mutiny On the Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Cats A-Weigh" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper
"Dog Gone People" with Elmer Fudd and Rupert Dog
"Tugboat Granny" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny

Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 26 (Mar. 4, 1989)
Bugs prevails against fearsome opponents in the Sahara Desert and in a bullfight ring, Sylvester and an oafish chum hunt 
for mice in a warehouse, invention of a portable hole leads to a crime spree, and Tweety is a criminal's hostage and a 
National Park exhibit.
PART ONE
"Sahara Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Long-Haired Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Giovanni Jones
"Catty Cornered" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Rocky
PART TWO
"Bully For Bugs" with Bugs Bunny and the Bull
"Hoppy Go Lucky" with Sylvester, Benny Cat, and Hippety Hopper
"The Hole Idea" with Calvin Q. Calculus
"Tweet, Tweet, Tweety" with Tweety and Sylvester

Chris Columbus, Claude Cat, and Sam the Goony Cat.

Cartoons Shown On The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show (1989-90)

"The Rabbit of Seville" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd
"My Bunny Lies Over the Sea" with Bugs Bunny and Angus McCrory
"The Abominable Snow Rabbit" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and the Abominable Snowman
"Beanstalk Bunny" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Elmer Fudd
"Hare-Way to the Stars" with Bugs Bunny and Marvin Martian
"Sahara Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Hillbilly Hare" with Bugs Bunny and the Martin Brothers
"Bunker Hill Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"What's Up, Doc?" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd
"Prince Varmint" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Dumb Patrol" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Portrait of the Artist as a Young Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd
"Knights Must Fall" with Bugs Bunny and Sir Pantsalot of Dropseat Manor
"Devil's Feud Cake" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Robot Rabbit" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd
"Hare We Go" with Bugs Bunny and Chris Columbus
"Half Fare Hare" with Bugs Bunny, Ralph Kramden, and Ed Norton
"Spaced-Out Bunny" with Bugs Bunny, Marvin Martian, and the Abominable Snowman
"Compressed Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Wile E. Coyote
"The Million-Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck
"This is a Life?" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Elmer Fudd, Yosemite Sam, and Granny
"Long-Haired Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Giovanni Jones
"Wet Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Blacque Jacque Shellacque
"Hare-Abian Nights" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"From Hare to Heir" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"What's Opera, Doc?" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd
"Person to Bunny" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Elmer Fudd
"Bedevilled Rabbit" with Bugs Bunny and Tasmanian Devil
"Mississippi Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Colonel Shuffle
"Bonanza Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Blacque Jacque Shellacque
"Big House Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Duck! Rabbit! Duck!" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Elmer Fudd
"Mutiny On the Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Devil May Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Tasmanian Devil
"Shiskabugs" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Mad as a Mars Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Marvin Martian
"Piker's Peak" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"14 Carrot Rabbit" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Hare-Breadth Hurry" with Bugs Bunny and Wile E. Coyote
"High Diving Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Bugs Bunny's Christmas Carol" with Bugs Bunny, Yosemite Sam, Porky Pig, Tweety, Sylvester, Pepe Le Pew, Elmer Fudd, and Foghorn Leghorn
"Bugs Bonnets" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd
"Hot Cross Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and the Bespectacled Doctor
"Hare Trimmed" with Bugs Bunny, Yosemite Sam, and Granny
"Apes of Wrath" with Bugs Bunny and the Drunken Stork
"Bewitched Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Witch Hazel
"No Parking Hare" with Bugs Bunny and the Construction Worker
"Hare-Less Wolf" with Bugs Bunny and Charles M. Wolf
"Dr. Devil and Mr. Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Tasmanian Devil
"The Fair-Haired Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam
"Knighty Knight Bugs" with Bugs Bunny, Yosemite Sam, and the Dragon
"Transylvania 6-5000" with Bugs Bunny and Count Bloodcount
"The Windblown Hare" with Bugs Bunny and the Big Bad Wolf
"Bully For Bugs" with Bugs Bunny and the Bull
"Pre-Hysterical Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd
"Bill of Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Tasmanian Devil
"Birds Anonymous" with Tweety and Sylvester
"Hawaiian Aye Aye" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"All Abir-r-rd" with Tweety and Sylvester
"Home Tweet Home" with Tweety and Sylvester
"Tweety's S.O.S." with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"Catty Cornered" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Rocky
"Trip For Tat" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"Hyde and Go Tweet" with Tweety and Sylvester
"Satan's Waitin'" with Tweety and Sylvester
"Sandy Claws" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"A Pizza Tweety Pie" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"Muzzle Tough" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"Tweet and Lovely" with Tweety and Sylvester
"Tweet Dreams" with Tweety and Sylvester
"Tree Cornered Tweety" with Tweety and Sylvester
"Tweety and the Beanstalk" with Tweety and Sylvester
"A Street Cat Named Sylvester" with Tweety, Sylvester, Granny, and Hector Bulldog
"Tweet, Tweet, Tweety" with Tweety and Sylvester
"The Jet Cage" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"The Last Hungry Cat" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"A Bird in a Guilty Cage" with Tweety and Sylvester
"A Bird in a Bonnet" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"Dog Pounded" with Tweety and Sylvester
"Canary Row" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"Trick or Tweet" with Tweety and Sylvester
"Ain't She Tweet" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"Tugboat Granny" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"Fowl Weather" with Tweety, Sylvester, Granny, and Hector Bulldog
"Red Riding Hoodwinked" with Tweety, Sylvester, Granny, and the Big Bad Wolf
"Gift Wrapped" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
"Touche and Go" with Pepe Le Pew
"For Scent-imental Reasons" with Pepe Le Pew
"Heaven Scent" with Pepe Le Pew
"Little Beau Pepe" with Pepe Le Pew
"Wild Over You" with Pepe Le Pew
"A Scent of the Matterhorn" with Pepe Le Pew
"Corn On the Cop" with Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, and Granny
"Robin Hood Daffy" with Daffy Duck and Porky Pig
"Duck Dodgers and the Return of the 24 1/2th Century" with Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, Gossamer, and Marvin Martian
"Dog Gone People" with Elmer Fudd and Rupert Dog
"A Mutt in a Rut" with Elmer Fudd and Rover the Dog
"Mouse-Taken Identity" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper
"Dr. Jerkyl's Hide" with Sylvester, Spike, and Chester
"Cats A-Weigh" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper
"Hoppy Go Lucky" with Sylvester, Benny Cat, and Hippety Hopper
"The Slap-Hoppy Mouse" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper
"Freudy Cat" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper
"A Mouse Divided" with Sylvester and the Drunken Stork
"Pop 'im Pop!" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper
"Tree For Two" with Sylvester, Spike, and Chester
"D' Fightin' Ones" with Sylvester and Bulldog
"Little Boy Boo" with Foghorn Leghorn, Miss Prissy, and Egghead Jr.
"Mother Was a Rooster" with Foghorn Leghorn
"The Foghorn Leghorn" with Foghorn Leghorn and Henery Hawk
"A Fractured Leghorn" with Foghorn Leghorn
"Lovelorn Leghorn" with Foghorn Leghorn and Miss Prissy
"Don't Give Up the Sheep" with Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog
"Woolen Under Where" with Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog
"A Sheep in the Deep" with Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog
"Double or Mutton" with Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog
"Dog Gone South" with Charlie Dog and Colonel Shuffle
"I Gopher You" with the Goofy Gophers
"Hippety Hopper" with Sylvester and Hippety Hopper
"Terrier Stricken" with Claude Cat and Frisky Puppy
"Two's a Crowd" with Claude Cat and Frisky Puppy
"Mouse Wreckers" with Claude Cat, Hubie, and Bertie
"One Froggy Evening" with Michigan J. Frog
"Martian Through Georgia" with the Friendly Alien


Hassan the Arab, Marc Antony and Pussyfoot, and the Weasel.
Season 5
In 1990, The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show on ABC underwent an overhaul, with many cartoons, previously in syndication packages, added to its compliment of classic Warner Brothers cartoon shorts. After a prior season characterized by such sloppiness as the same cartoon, "My Bunny Lies Over the Sea", being shown two weeks in a row, order seemed to be restored to the series, and with it an apparent tendency to package episodes with similarities in themes, motifs, or plot elements among the constituent cartoons.

Show 1 contained "Baton Bunny", "Duck Dodgers in the 24 1/2th Century", "Rabbit Hood", "Rabbit Rampage", "Goldimouse and the Three Cats", "Ali Baba Bunny", and "Room and Bird". "Baton Bunny" involves an outdoor concert performance by night, beneath the stars. "Duck Dodgers in the 24 1/2th Century" is also nocturnal in that it transpires not only in space and on a dark and desolate planet but also, at its beginning, on Earth after sunset. Daffy's green Duck Dodgers outfit compares with that of Robin Hood in "Rabbit Hood". Sherwood Forest in "Rabbit Hood" shares a tree motif with both the scripted woodland of "Rabbit Rampage" and the forest of "Goldimouse and the Three Cats". "Rabbit Hood", "Goldimouse and the Three Cats", and "Ali Baba Bunny" all are located in legendary or fairy-tale times or places, and in "Goldimouse and the Three Cats", Sylvester uses a Robin Hood-like, bow-and-arrow slingshot to try to catch Goldimouse. Someone is guarding territory in three of the cartoons in this episode: the Sheriff of Nottingham in "Rabbit Hood" oversees the King's Carrot Patch; Hassan the Arab stands guard at the entrance to the cave in "Ali Baba Bunny"; and the cantankerous desk clerk is a pet-banning sentinel at the hotel in "Room and Bird".

Show 2's cartoons were "Bunny Hugged", "Pizzicato Pussycat", "Hare Do", "A Bone For a Bone", "Ready, Woolen, and Able", "Louvre Come Back to Me", and "Bad Ol' Putty Tat". The Arabian honor guard to Ravishing Ronald in "Bunny Hugged" recalls the setting of Show 1's "Ali Baba Bunny". Show 1's "Baton Bunny" features a nighttime musical performance by Bugs, and the wrestling match of "Bunny Hugged" transpires at night, as also does the cat's phoney piano solo at Carnegie Hall in "Pizzicato Pussycat". Carnegie Hall in "Pizzicato Pussycat" is a theatre, and the events of "Hare Do" mostly occur in a lavish cinema. The backyard scenery of "A Bone For a Bone" is similar to that of "Bad Ol' Putty Tat". In "Bunny Hugged" and "Bad Ol' Putty Tat", Bugs and Tweety respectively become reluctant participants in a sport, wrestling in the former and badminton in the latter. In "Ready, Woolen, and Able", Ralph Wolf is swallowed by a whale and is shown in the whale's throat; similarly, Tweety is swallowed by Sylvester and seen in the cat's closed mouth. Tweety is shown to live in an elevated birdhouse in "Bad Ol' Putty Tat" and in Show 3's "Tweet and Lovely".

The cartoons in Show 3 were "Lumber Jack-Rabbit", "Boobs in the Woods", "8 Ball Bunny", "Two Scents Worth", "Feed the Kitty", "Hare Lift", and "Tweet and Lovely". The forest motif, first noticeable in Show 1, recurs in "Lumber Jack-Rabbit" (Paul Bunyan country) and in "Boobs in the Woods". Bugs' attempt to mine a giant carrot in "Lumber Jack-Rabbit", putting his extracted material in an iron cart, is reminiscent of Daffy's pillage, with the same instrument, of the Arabian cave-vault in Show 1's "Ali Baba Bunny". Bugs meanders through Paul Bunyan country, carrying his bundled belongings on a hobo-stick, precisely like the penguin carries his materials in "8 Ball Bunny". A bulldog protects Tweety from Sylvester in "Tweet and Lovely", as bulldog Marc Anthony is kitten Pussyfoot's guardian in "Feed the Kitty". Robots are seen in "Hare Lift" and "Tweet and Lovely". All of the following foreshadow Show 4's "Hyde and Hare": Bugs sings about having a master in his rendition of "Jimmy Crack Corn" in "Lumber Jack-Rabbit", and Bunyan's axe, sticking out of a high tree trunk and with his name on the handle, is rather like a doctor's shingle; Daffy puts himself in Porky's arms in "Boobs in the Woods"; Pepe Le Pew refers to timidity in regard to the female cat that he is mistaking for a girl skunk in "Two Scents Worth"; a poster hanging on a wall in the town of Nasty Pass in "Two Scents Worth" shows a distinguished-looking man about to imbibe a beverage called "Olde Innertube"; Marc Anthony "adopts" Pussyfoot as his pet in "Feed the Kitty"; Sylvester's headquarters in "Tweet and Lovely" is an inventor's laboratory.

Show 4 consisted of "Hyde and Hare", "A Mouse Divided", "Hare-Less Wolf", "Cat Feud", "Beanstalk Bunny", "A Broken Leghorn", "Hot Cross Bunny", and "The Jet Cage". White-plumed birds (pigeons and the drunken stork) connect "Hyde and Hare" and "A Mouse Divided". Also, Sylvester's attempt to walk a carriage containing the baby mouse in "A Mouse Divided", is accompanied by the song, "Strolling Through the Park". A park is the setting for the beginning of "Hyde and Hare". In "Hyde and Hare", Bugs' proposal for adoption by Jekyll includes a daily feeding of carrots in bed by the Doc, which is an aspect of Bugs' pampered situation in "Hot Cross Bunny", in that the doctor in this cartoon provides to the specimen Bugs every comfort. In "A Mouse Divided", leisurely Sylvester is scolded by his wife, who describes him as a "lazy good-for-nothing", exactly the same words used by Charles M. Wolf's shrewish spouse in "Hare-Less Wolf". This was the second consecutive episode with a Marc Anthony and Pussyfoot cartoon. Marc Anthony in "Cat Feud" gives a wiener to Pussyfoot, and in "Hot Cross Bunny", Bugs is cooking a wiener over an open fire while impersonating a Boy Scout. "Beanstalk Bunny" is alike with Show 3's "Lumber Jack-Rabbit" in its giant-land setting.

The contents of Show 5 were "Foxy By Proxy", "Hoppy Go Lucky", "Dumb Patrol", "No Barking", "Drip-Along Daffy", "The Rabbit of Seville", and "Gift Wrapped". Dawn is shown in "Foxy By Proxy", "Dumb Patrol", and "No Barking". "Dumb Patrol" and Show 4's "The Jet Cage" share the theme of flight and aerial pursuit. The dopey dog in "Foxy By Proxy" is quite like Sylvester's dimwit friend, Benny, in "Hoppy Go Lucky". A park