Does any Looney Tunes character ever use any fictional brand-name product that isn't ACME?












102















Now that Looney Tunes is on-topic, maybe I can get an answer for something I've been wondering about for a while: Looney Tunes characters, (most famously Wile E. Coyote), always use products with the brand name ACME:
enter image description here
Do they ever use products anywhere from a different fictional company?










share|improve this question




















  • 82





    Note: your second picture already includes a non-ACME product

    – SztupY
    Feb 9 at 23:54






  • 5





    Has the "Jim Dandy" wagon in the last image also been overlooked?

    – ApproachingDarknessFish
    Feb 10 at 4:39






  • 6





    @ApproachingDarknessFish I think "jim-dandy" might be an adjective. Not one you'd hear in past 30 years, though.

    – Verdan
    Feb 10 at 6:11






  • 2





    @Valorum I clearly state "fictional" in the question.

    – TheAsh
    Feb 10 at 19:43






  • 1





    @AbrahamRay there used to be a few ACME products listed in the old 1900's-era Sears catalogs etc: farm8.static.flickr.com/7748/26861261164_858c0b1b60_b.jpg

    – Aaron Lavers
    Feb 11 at 7:13
















102















Now that Looney Tunes is on-topic, maybe I can get an answer for something I've been wondering about for a while: Looney Tunes characters, (most famously Wile E. Coyote), always use products with the brand name ACME:
enter image description here
Do they ever use products anywhere from a different fictional company?










share|improve this question




















  • 82





    Note: your second picture already includes a non-ACME product

    – SztupY
    Feb 9 at 23:54






  • 5





    Has the "Jim Dandy" wagon in the last image also been overlooked?

    – ApproachingDarknessFish
    Feb 10 at 4:39






  • 6





    @ApproachingDarknessFish I think "jim-dandy" might be an adjective. Not one you'd hear in past 30 years, though.

    – Verdan
    Feb 10 at 6:11






  • 2





    @Valorum I clearly state "fictional" in the question.

    – TheAsh
    Feb 10 at 19:43






  • 1





    @AbrahamRay there used to be a few ACME products listed in the old 1900's-era Sears catalogs etc: farm8.static.flickr.com/7748/26861261164_858c0b1b60_b.jpg

    – Aaron Lavers
    Feb 11 at 7:13














102












102








102


4






Now that Looney Tunes is on-topic, maybe I can get an answer for something I've been wondering about for a while: Looney Tunes characters, (most famously Wile E. Coyote), always use products with the brand name ACME:
enter image description here
Do they ever use products anywhere from a different fictional company?










share|improve this question
















Now that Looney Tunes is on-topic, maybe I can get an answer for something I've been wondering about for a while: Looney Tunes characters, (most famously Wile E. Coyote), always use products with the brand name ACME:
enter image description here
Do they ever use products anywhere from a different fictional company?







looney-tunes






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Feb 10 at 13:59









OrangeDog

2,12821321




2,12821321










asked Feb 9 at 21:29









TheAshTheAsh

9,791649124




9,791649124








  • 82





    Note: your second picture already includes a non-ACME product

    – SztupY
    Feb 9 at 23:54






  • 5





    Has the "Jim Dandy" wagon in the last image also been overlooked?

    – ApproachingDarknessFish
    Feb 10 at 4:39






  • 6





    @ApproachingDarknessFish I think "jim-dandy" might be an adjective. Not one you'd hear in past 30 years, though.

    – Verdan
    Feb 10 at 6:11






  • 2





    @Valorum I clearly state "fictional" in the question.

    – TheAsh
    Feb 10 at 19:43






  • 1





    @AbrahamRay there used to be a few ACME products listed in the old 1900's-era Sears catalogs etc: farm8.static.flickr.com/7748/26861261164_858c0b1b60_b.jpg

    – Aaron Lavers
    Feb 11 at 7:13














  • 82





    Note: your second picture already includes a non-ACME product

    – SztupY
    Feb 9 at 23:54






  • 5





    Has the "Jim Dandy" wagon in the last image also been overlooked?

    – ApproachingDarknessFish
    Feb 10 at 4:39






  • 6





    @ApproachingDarknessFish I think "jim-dandy" might be an adjective. Not one you'd hear in past 30 years, though.

    – Verdan
    Feb 10 at 6:11






  • 2





    @Valorum I clearly state "fictional" in the question.

    – TheAsh
    Feb 10 at 19:43






  • 1





    @AbrahamRay there used to be a few ACME products listed in the old 1900's-era Sears catalogs etc: farm8.static.flickr.com/7748/26861261164_858c0b1b60_b.jpg

    – Aaron Lavers
    Feb 11 at 7:13








82




82





Note: your second picture already includes a non-ACME product

– SztupY
Feb 9 at 23:54





Note: your second picture already includes a non-ACME product

– SztupY
Feb 9 at 23:54




5




5





Has the "Jim Dandy" wagon in the last image also been overlooked?

– ApproachingDarknessFish
Feb 10 at 4:39





Has the "Jim Dandy" wagon in the last image also been overlooked?

– ApproachingDarknessFish
Feb 10 at 4:39




6




6





@ApproachingDarknessFish I think "jim-dandy" might be an adjective. Not one you'd hear in past 30 years, though.

– Verdan
Feb 10 at 6:11





@ApproachingDarknessFish I think "jim-dandy" might be an adjective. Not one you'd hear in past 30 years, though.

– Verdan
Feb 10 at 6:11




2




2





@Valorum I clearly state "fictional" in the question.

– TheAsh
Feb 10 at 19:43





@Valorum I clearly state "fictional" in the question.

– TheAsh
Feb 10 at 19:43




1




1





@AbrahamRay there used to be a few ACME products listed in the old 1900's-era Sears catalogs etc: farm8.static.flickr.com/7748/26861261164_858c0b1b60_b.jpg

– Aaron Lavers
Feb 11 at 7:13





@AbrahamRay there used to be a few ACME products listed in the old 1900's-era Sears catalogs etc: farm8.static.flickr.com/7748/26861261164_858c0b1b60_b.jpg

– Aaron Lavers
Feb 11 at 7:13










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















219





+50









Looney Tunes brands



In Fast and Furry-ous (1949) Wile E. Coyote uses an "Ace" brand electric motor.



enter image description here



and "Fleet-Foot" jet-propelled tennis shoes.



enter image description here





In Beep, Beep! (1952) Wile E. Coyote uses an empty "Harris Soup" box as a stand. This, presumably was an homage to animator Ken Harris.



enter image description here





In Zipping Along (1953) we see another Ace product, steel shot.



enter image description here





In Ready, Set, Zoom! (1955), our hapless protagonist travels through a mine owned by the "Selzer Mining Co.", presumably an homage to producer Eddie Selzer.



enter image description here





In Zoom and Bored (1957) Wile E. Coyote has gotten himself an "Ahab" branded harpoon gun.



enter image description here





In Going! Going! Gosh! we find that Wile E. Coyote has bought an "Excelsior" branded electric fan.



enter image description here





In Rushing Roulette (1965) we encounter "Ajax" brand glue.



enter image description here



and what appears to be a Greyhound branded bus. Note that this is a real brand, not a fictional one.



enter image description here





In Zip 'n' Snort (1961) we also see another Ajax product, bird seed.



enter image description here





In Duck Dodgers In The 24½th Century (1952) Marvin has a tendency to use "A-1" branded products, a brand that's also seen (occasionally) in the early Looney Tunes cartoons.



enter image description here





In Compressed Hare (1961), Bugs Bunny orders a "Zajaxi" branded dynamo to use against Wile E. Coyote.



enter image description here





In Adventures of the Road Runner (1962) we see that Wile E. Coyote has foolishly been buying "Road-Runner Blue-Print Co." branded blueprints.



enter image description here





In To Beep or Not to Beep (1963) we see that the Wile E. Coyote has foolishly bought a giant (and consistently defective) catapult from the "Road-Runner Manufacturing Co."



enter image description here





Looney-Tunes co-branded adverts



In this series of Plymouth Cars commercial (this one from 1968), we learn that Ajax also manufacture rocket cars.



enter image description here



In the 1969 commercial, we see that Ajax have diversified into 'dumping'.



enter image description here



And in this 1970 commercial, Ajax evidently sell 'car crushers' as well.



enter image description here





In a series of commercials for Energizer Batteries, Wile E. Coyote finds that their fictional rival brand "SUPERVOLT" are (as usual) underwhelming.



enter image description here





In the late 1960s, Warner Bros came up with the idea for a branded Road Runner cereal called "Post's Beep Beep Cereal" and even went as far as mocking up an animatic to show Post Cereals executives what the advert might look like. Since the brand only existed on paper (the deal wasn't finalised), this seems to fall into the category of 'fictional'.



enter image description here





In Tiny Toon Adventures, toons have a choice of attending Acme Looniversity or its rival, "Perfecto Prep" as seen in The Acme Bowl (1990) and other episodes.



enter image description here





Merry Melodies/Looney Tunes brands



In Cheese Chasers (1952) Hubie and Herbert raid a cheese factory called "Hunka Cheese Co."



enter image description here





In Mouse Wreckers (1949), Claude Cat has a green bottle of "Harris" hair tonic in his medicine cabinet.



enter image description here





In Smile, Darn Ya, Smile (1931) Foxy the trolley engineer has adverts on his trolley bus for "Sniff Brothers" cough drops and "Risk" Tires



enter image description here





In The Dish Ran Away with the Spoon (1933), we see some "Sunrise" prunes in the background of the kitchen.



enter image description here





In Buddy's Day Out (1933), our hero is implored to smoke "Gazelles" cigarettes and "Myrol" cigarettes.



enter image description here





In Buddy's Beer Garden (1933), Buddy serves "Bock" beer.



enter image description here





In Sittin' on a Backyard Fence (1933), the alleycats are sitting on a fence with posters that advertise two distinctive brands; "Bull Dernem" tobacco and "Tarnation" milk.



enter image description here





How Do I Know It's Sunday? (1934) features a veritable cornucopia of fake and parody brands; "Anchor" sardines, "Pink Ribbon" malt, "American Biscuit Baking Co." crackers, "Aunt Mamie" and "Aunt Eliza" pancake flour, "Scream" wheat, "Old Maid" cleanser, "Burno" canned heat, "Searchlight" cleanser, "Jamble Inc." cleaner, "MB Spice Co." tinned peppers, "Garo" syrup, "Pratts" biscuits, "Sunny Side" raisins, "Kelly's" corn flakes, "Best-o" toilet paper, "Norm's" crackers and "Tibby" evaporated milk.



enter image description here





In Milk and Money (1936), Porky Pig works for the "Fuller Water Milk Co." as a milkman.



enter image description here





In Wholly Smoke (1938) Porky Pig encounters a range of cigarette brands; "El Ropo" cigars, "Union" tobacco, "Barkley Square" tobacco, "Picadilly Sprouts" cheroots, "Velour" smoking tobacco and "The Hibernian Tobacco Co.", makers of 'Genuine Bossy Flakes'.



enter image description here





In You're An Education (1938),we learn that travellers can travel via a boat from the "Alaska Steamship Company"



enter image description here





In The Night-Watchman (1938), Tommy Cat walks past another A-1 product, a box of pretzels.



enter image description here





In The Sour Puss (1940) we see another company name, "Consolidated Pants". Interestingly, this is also the first mention of "Acme" as a company name.



enter image description here





In Tortoise Beats Hare, Cecil Turtle uses a "Bell Turtlephone Co." branded telephone box to call his family.



enter image description here





In Goofy Groceries (1941) we see another slew of fake and parody product names and company names; "Jelly Bean Co." jelly beans, "Speeds" premium hams, "Guavida Rock Co.", "Star Products", "Sid's" mustard, "Fountain Spray Candy Co.", "Weate Company", "Uama Biscuit Co.", "Superguy Co." soap chips.



enter image description here






share|improve this answer





















  • 32





    I am simply amazed. The question was asked yesterday at 21:30. Your full answer was done about 12 hours later, including a night. Out of curiosity: how can someone be so knowledgeable about cartoon (and TV details, in general) to dig these up? I answer technical questions and these are easy: if I know the answer, it is a matter of sourcing it correctly, but the sources are usually limited (documentation) and I know where to look for them. Or I have an opinion and it is even simpler. Here you had to dig into cartoons! Knowing which to ding into! Incredible.

    – WoJ
    Feb 10 at 17:27






  • 42





    @WoJ - Connor Ratliff's twitter feed was an enormous help, as was the Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runnerr which mentions a variety of other brands and (helpfully) the episodes in which they're found. I also watched about 40 episodes (at 48x speed) to see if I'd missed anything.

    – Valorum
    Feb 10 at 18:13








  • 2





    F***ing awesome answer!

    – Danny3414
    2 days ago











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1 Answer
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active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









219





+50









Looney Tunes brands



In Fast and Furry-ous (1949) Wile E. Coyote uses an "Ace" brand electric motor.



enter image description here



and "Fleet-Foot" jet-propelled tennis shoes.



enter image description here





In Beep, Beep! (1952) Wile E. Coyote uses an empty "Harris Soup" box as a stand. This, presumably was an homage to animator Ken Harris.



enter image description here





In Zipping Along (1953) we see another Ace product, steel shot.



enter image description here





In Ready, Set, Zoom! (1955), our hapless protagonist travels through a mine owned by the "Selzer Mining Co.", presumably an homage to producer Eddie Selzer.



enter image description here





In Zoom and Bored (1957) Wile E. Coyote has gotten himself an "Ahab" branded harpoon gun.



enter image description here





In Going! Going! Gosh! we find that Wile E. Coyote has bought an "Excelsior" branded electric fan.



enter image description here





In Rushing Roulette (1965) we encounter "Ajax" brand glue.



enter image description here



and what appears to be a Greyhound branded bus. Note that this is a real brand, not a fictional one.



enter image description here





In Zip 'n' Snort (1961) we also see another Ajax product, bird seed.



enter image description here





In Duck Dodgers In The 24½th Century (1952) Marvin has a tendency to use "A-1" branded products, a brand that's also seen (occasionally) in the early Looney Tunes cartoons.



enter image description here





In Compressed Hare (1961), Bugs Bunny orders a "Zajaxi" branded dynamo to use against Wile E. Coyote.



enter image description here





In Adventures of the Road Runner (1962) we see that Wile E. Coyote has foolishly been buying "Road-Runner Blue-Print Co." branded blueprints.



enter image description here





In To Beep or Not to Beep (1963) we see that the Wile E. Coyote has foolishly bought a giant (and consistently defective) catapult from the "Road-Runner Manufacturing Co."



enter image description here





Looney-Tunes co-branded adverts



In this series of Plymouth Cars commercial (this one from 1968), we learn that Ajax also manufacture rocket cars.



enter image description here



In the 1969 commercial, we see that Ajax have diversified into 'dumping'.



enter image description here



And in this 1970 commercial, Ajax evidently sell 'car crushers' as well.



enter image description here





In a series of commercials for Energizer Batteries, Wile E. Coyote finds that their fictional rival brand "SUPERVOLT" are (as usual) underwhelming.



enter image description here





In the late 1960s, Warner Bros came up with the idea for a branded Road Runner cereal called "Post's Beep Beep Cereal" and even went as far as mocking up an animatic to show Post Cereals executives what the advert might look like. Since the brand only existed on paper (the deal wasn't finalised), this seems to fall into the category of 'fictional'.



enter image description here





In Tiny Toon Adventures, toons have a choice of attending Acme Looniversity or its rival, "Perfecto Prep" as seen in The Acme Bowl (1990) and other episodes.



enter image description here





Merry Melodies/Looney Tunes brands



In Cheese Chasers (1952) Hubie and Herbert raid a cheese factory called "Hunka Cheese Co."



enter image description here





In Mouse Wreckers (1949), Claude Cat has a green bottle of "Harris" hair tonic in his medicine cabinet.



enter image description here





In Smile, Darn Ya, Smile (1931) Foxy the trolley engineer has adverts on his trolley bus for "Sniff Brothers" cough drops and "Risk" Tires



enter image description here





In The Dish Ran Away with the Spoon (1933), we see some "Sunrise" prunes in the background of the kitchen.



enter image description here





In Buddy's Day Out (1933), our hero is implored to smoke "Gazelles" cigarettes and "Myrol" cigarettes.



enter image description here





In Buddy's Beer Garden (1933), Buddy serves "Bock" beer.



enter image description here





In Sittin' on a Backyard Fence (1933), the alleycats are sitting on a fence with posters that advertise two distinctive brands; "Bull Dernem" tobacco and "Tarnation" milk.



enter image description here





How Do I Know It's Sunday? (1934) features a veritable cornucopia of fake and parody brands; "Anchor" sardines, "Pink Ribbon" malt, "American Biscuit Baking Co." crackers, "Aunt Mamie" and "Aunt Eliza" pancake flour, "Scream" wheat, "Old Maid" cleanser, "Burno" canned heat, "Searchlight" cleanser, "Jamble Inc." cleaner, "MB Spice Co." tinned peppers, "Garo" syrup, "Pratts" biscuits, "Sunny Side" raisins, "Kelly's" corn flakes, "Best-o" toilet paper, "Norm's" crackers and "Tibby" evaporated milk.



enter image description here





In Milk and Money (1936), Porky Pig works for the "Fuller Water Milk Co." as a milkman.



enter image description here





In Wholly Smoke (1938) Porky Pig encounters a range of cigarette brands; "El Ropo" cigars, "Union" tobacco, "Barkley Square" tobacco, "Picadilly Sprouts" cheroots, "Velour" smoking tobacco and "The Hibernian Tobacco Co.", makers of 'Genuine Bossy Flakes'.



enter image description here





In You're An Education (1938),we learn that travellers can travel via a boat from the "Alaska Steamship Company"



enter image description here





In The Night-Watchman (1938), Tommy Cat walks past another A-1 product, a box of pretzels.



enter image description here





In The Sour Puss (1940) we see another company name, "Consolidated Pants". Interestingly, this is also the first mention of "Acme" as a company name.



enter image description here





In Tortoise Beats Hare, Cecil Turtle uses a "Bell Turtlephone Co." branded telephone box to call his family.



enter image description here





In Goofy Groceries (1941) we see another slew of fake and parody product names and company names; "Jelly Bean Co." jelly beans, "Speeds" premium hams, "Guavida Rock Co.", "Star Products", "Sid's" mustard, "Fountain Spray Candy Co.", "Weate Company", "Uama Biscuit Co.", "Superguy Co." soap chips.



enter image description here






share|improve this answer





















  • 32





    I am simply amazed. The question was asked yesterday at 21:30. Your full answer was done about 12 hours later, including a night. Out of curiosity: how can someone be so knowledgeable about cartoon (and TV details, in general) to dig these up? I answer technical questions and these are easy: if I know the answer, it is a matter of sourcing it correctly, but the sources are usually limited (documentation) and I know where to look for them. Or I have an opinion and it is even simpler. Here you had to dig into cartoons! Knowing which to ding into! Incredible.

    – WoJ
    Feb 10 at 17:27






  • 42





    @WoJ - Connor Ratliff's twitter feed was an enormous help, as was the Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runnerr which mentions a variety of other brands and (helpfully) the episodes in which they're found. I also watched about 40 episodes (at 48x speed) to see if I'd missed anything.

    – Valorum
    Feb 10 at 18:13








  • 2





    F***ing awesome answer!

    – Danny3414
    2 days ago
















219





+50









Looney Tunes brands



In Fast and Furry-ous (1949) Wile E. Coyote uses an "Ace" brand electric motor.



enter image description here



and "Fleet-Foot" jet-propelled tennis shoes.



enter image description here





In Beep, Beep! (1952) Wile E. Coyote uses an empty "Harris Soup" box as a stand. This, presumably was an homage to animator Ken Harris.



enter image description here





In Zipping Along (1953) we see another Ace product, steel shot.



enter image description here





In Ready, Set, Zoom! (1955), our hapless protagonist travels through a mine owned by the "Selzer Mining Co.", presumably an homage to producer Eddie Selzer.



enter image description here





In Zoom and Bored (1957) Wile E. Coyote has gotten himself an "Ahab" branded harpoon gun.



enter image description here





In Going! Going! Gosh! we find that Wile E. Coyote has bought an "Excelsior" branded electric fan.



enter image description here





In Rushing Roulette (1965) we encounter "Ajax" brand glue.



enter image description here



and what appears to be a Greyhound branded bus. Note that this is a real brand, not a fictional one.



enter image description here





In Zip 'n' Snort (1961) we also see another Ajax product, bird seed.



enter image description here





In Duck Dodgers In The 24½th Century (1952) Marvin has a tendency to use "A-1" branded products, a brand that's also seen (occasionally) in the early Looney Tunes cartoons.



enter image description here





In Compressed Hare (1961), Bugs Bunny orders a "Zajaxi" branded dynamo to use against Wile E. Coyote.



enter image description here





In Adventures of the Road Runner (1962) we see that Wile E. Coyote has foolishly been buying "Road-Runner Blue-Print Co." branded blueprints.



enter image description here





In To Beep or Not to Beep (1963) we see that the Wile E. Coyote has foolishly bought a giant (and consistently defective) catapult from the "Road-Runner Manufacturing Co."



enter image description here





Looney-Tunes co-branded adverts



In this series of Plymouth Cars commercial (this one from 1968), we learn that Ajax also manufacture rocket cars.



enter image description here



In the 1969 commercial, we see that Ajax have diversified into 'dumping'.



enter image description here



And in this 1970 commercial, Ajax evidently sell 'car crushers' as well.



enter image description here





In a series of commercials for Energizer Batteries, Wile E. Coyote finds that their fictional rival brand "SUPERVOLT" are (as usual) underwhelming.



enter image description here





In the late 1960s, Warner Bros came up with the idea for a branded Road Runner cereal called "Post's Beep Beep Cereal" and even went as far as mocking up an animatic to show Post Cereals executives what the advert might look like. Since the brand only existed on paper (the deal wasn't finalised), this seems to fall into the category of 'fictional'.



enter image description here





In Tiny Toon Adventures, toons have a choice of attending Acme Looniversity or its rival, "Perfecto Prep" as seen in The Acme Bowl (1990) and other episodes.



enter image description here





Merry Melodies/Looney Tunes brands



In Cheese Chasers (1952) Hubie and Herbert raid a cheese factory called "Hunka Cheese Co."



enter image description here





In Mouse Wreckers (1949), Claude Cat has a green bottle of "Harris" hair tonic in his medicine cabinet.



enter image description here





In Smile, Darn Ya, Smile (1931) Foxy the trolley engineer has adverts on his trolley bus for "Sniff Brothers" cough drops and "Risk" Tires



enter image description here





In The Dish Ran Away with the Spoon (1933), we see some "Sunrise" prunes in the background of the kitchen.



enter image description here





In Buddy's Day Out (1933), our hero is implored to smoke "Gazelles" cigarettes and "Myrol" cigarettes.



enter image description here





In Buddy's Beer Garden (1933), Buddy serves "Bock" beer.



enter image description here





In Sittin' on a Backyard Fence (1933), the alleycats are sitting on a fence with posters that advertise two distinctive brands; "Bull Dernem" tobacco and "Tarnation" milk.



enter image description here





How Do I Know It's Sunday? (1934) features a veritable cornucopia of fake and parody brands; "Anchor" sardines, "Pink Ribbon" malt, "American Biscuit Baking Co." crackers, "Aunt Mamie" and "Aunt Eliza" pancake flour, "Scream" wheat, "Old Maid" cleanser, "Burno" canned heat, "Searchlight" cleanser, "Jamble Inc." cleaner, "MB Spice Co." tinned peppers, "Garo" syrup, "Pratts" biscuits, "Sunny Side" raisins, "Kelly's" corn flakes, "Best-o" toilet paper, "Norm's" crackers and "Tibby" evaporated milk.



enter image description here





In Milk and Money (1936), Porky Pig works for the "Fuller Water Milk Co." as a milkman.



enter image description here





In Wholly Smoke (1938) Porky Pig encounters a range of cigarette brands; "El Ropo" cigars, "Union" tobacco, "Barkley Square" tobacco, "Picadilly Sprouts" cheroots, "Velour" smoking tobacco and "The Hibernian Tobacco Co.", makers of 'Genuine Bossy Flakes'.



enter image description here





In You're An Education (1938),we learn that travellers can travel via a boat from the "Alaska Steamship Company"



enter image description here





In The Night-Watchman (1938), Tommy Cat walks past another A-1 product, a box of pretzels.



enter image description here





In The Sour Puss (1940) we see another company name, "Consolidated Pants". Interestingly, this is also the first mention of "Acme" as a company name.



enter image description here





In Tortoise Beats Hare, Cecil Turtle uses a "Bell Turtlephone Co." branded telephone box to call his family.



enter image description here





In Goofy Groceries (1941) we see another slew of fake and parody product names and company names; "Jelly Bean Co." jelly beans, "Speeds" premium hams, "Guavida Rock Co.", "Star Products", "Sid's" mustard, "Fountain Spray Candy Co.", "Weate Company", "Uama Biscuit Co.", "Superguy Co." soap chips.



enter image description here






share|improve this answer





















  • 32





    I am simply amazed. The question was asked yesterday at 21:30. Your full answer was done about 12 hours later, including a night. Out of curiosity: how can someone be so knowledgeable about cartoon (and TV details, in general) to dig these up? I answer technical questions and these are easy: if I know the answer, it is a matter of sourcing it correctly, but the sources are usually limited (documentation) and I know where to look for them. Or I have an opinion and it is even simpler. Here you had to dig into cartoons! Knowing which to ding into! Incredible.

    – WoJ
    Feb 10 at 17:27






  • 42





    @WoJ - Connor Ratliff's twitter feed was an enormous help, as was the Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runnerr which mentions a variety of other brands and (helpfully) the episodes in which they're found. I also watched about 40 episodes (at 48x speed) to see if I'd missed anything.

    – Valorum
    Feb 10 at 18:13








  • 2





    F***ing awesome answer!

    – Danny3414
    2 days ago














219





+50







219





+50



219




+50





Looney Tunes brands



In Fast and Furry-ous (1949) Wile E. Coyote uses an "Ace" brand electric motor.



enter image description here



and "Fleet-Foot" jet-propelled tennis shoes.



enter image description here





In Beep, Beep! (1952) Wile E. Coyote uses an empty "Harris Soup" box as a stand. This, presumably was an homage to animator Ken Harris.



enter image description here





In Zipping Along (1953) we see another Ace product, steel shot.



enter image description here





In Ready, Set, Zoom! (1955), our hapless protagonist travels through a mine owned by the "Selzer Mining Co.", presumably an homage to producer Eddie Selzer.



enter image description here





In Zoom and Bored (1957) Wile E. Coyote has gotten himself an "Ahab" branded harpoon gun.



enter image description here





In Going! Going! Gosh! we find that Wile E. Coyote has bought an "Excelsior" branded electric fan.



enter image description here





In Rushing Roulette (1965) we encounter "Ajax" brand glue.



enter image description here



and what appears to be a Greyhound branded bus. Note that this is a real brand, not a fictional one.



enter image description here





In Zip 'n' Snort (1961) we also see another Ajax product, bird seed.



enter image description here





In Duck Dodgers In The 24½th Century (1952) Marvin has a tendency to use "A-1" branded products, a brand that's also seen (occasionally) in the early Looney Tunes cartoons.



enter image description here





In Compressed Hare (1961), Bugs Bunny orders a "Zajaxi" branded dynamo to use against Wile E. Coyote.



enter image description here





In Adventures of the Road Runner (1962) we see that Wile E. Coyote has foolishly been buying "Road-Runner Blue-Print Co." branded blueprints.



enter image description here





In To Beep or Not to Beep (1963) we see that the Wile E. Coyote has foolishly bought a giant (and consistently defective) catapult from the "Road-Runner Manufacturing Co."



enter image description here





Looney-Tunes co-branded adverts



In this series of Plymouth Cars commercial (this one from 1968), we learn that Ajax also manufacture rocket cars.



enter image description here



In the 1969 commercial, we see that Ajax have diversified into 'dumping'.



enter image description here



And in this 1970 commercial, Ajax evidently sell 'car crushers' as well.



enter image description here





In a series of commercials for Energizer Batteries, Wile E. Coyote finds that their fictional rival brand "SUPERVOLT" are (as usual) underwhelming.



enter image description here





In the late 1960s, Warner Bros came up with the idea for a branded Road Runner cereal called "Post's Beep Beep Cereal" and even went as far as mocking up an animatic to show Post Cereals executives what the advert might look like. Since the brand only existed on paper (the deal wasn't finalised), this seems to fall into the category of 'fictional'.



enter image description here





In Tiny Toon Adventures, toons have a choice of attending Acme Looniversity or its rival, "Perfecto Prep" as seen in The Acme Bowl (1990) and other episodes.



enter image description here





Merry Melodies/Looney Tunes brands



In Cheese Chasers (1952) Hubie and Herbert raid a cheese factory called "Hunka Cheese Co."



enter image description here





In Mouse Wreckers (1949), Claude Cat has a green bottle of "Harris" hair tonic in his medicine cabinet.



enter image description here





In Smile, Darn Ya, Smile (1931) Foxy the trolley engineer has adverts on his trolley bus for "Sniff Brothers" cough drops and "Risk" Tires



enter image description here





In The Dish Ran Away with the Spoon (1933), we see some "Sunrise" prunes in the background of the kitchen.



enter image description here





In Buddy's Day Out (1933), our hero is implored to smoke "Gazelles" cigarettes and "Myrol" cigarettes.



enter image description here





In Buddy's Beer Garden (1933), Buddy serves "Bock" beer.



enter image description here





In Sittin' on a Backyard Fence (1933), the alleycats are sitting on a fence with posters that advertise two distinctive brands; "Bull Dernem" tobacco and "Tarnation" milk.



enter image description here





How Do I Know It's Sunday? (1934) features a veritable cornucopia of fake and parody brands; "Anchor" sardines, "Pink Ribbon" malt, "American Biscuit Baking Co." crackers, "Aunt Mamie" and "Aunt Eliza" pancake flour, "Scream" wheat, "Old Maid" cleanser, "Burno" canned heat, "Searchlight" cleanser, "Jamble Inc." cleaner, "MB Spice Co." tinned peppers, "Garo" syrup, "Pratts" biscuits, "Sunny Side" raisins, "Kelly's" corn flakes, "Best-o" toilet paper, "Norm's" crackers and "Tibby" evaporated milk.



enter image description here





In Milk and Money (1936), Porky Pig works for the "Fuller Water Milk Co." as a milkman.



enter image description here





In Wholly Smoke (1938) Porky Pig encounters a range of cigarette brands; "El Ropo" cigars, "Union" tobacco, "Barkley Square" tobacco, "Picadilly Sprouts" cheroots, "Velour" smoking tobacco and "The Hibernian Tobacco Co.", makers of 'Genuine Bossy Flakes'.



enter image description here





In You're An Education (1938),we learn that travellers can travel via a boat from the "Alaska Steamship Company"



enter image description here





In The Night-Watchman (1938), Tommy Cat walks past another A-1 product, a box of pretzels.



enter image description here





In The Sour Puss (1940) we see another company name, "Consolidated Pants". Interestingly, this is also the first mention of "Acme" as a company name.



enter image description here





In Tortoise Beats Hare, Cecil Turtle uses a "Bell Turtlephone Co." branded telephone box to call his family.



enter image description here





In Goofy Groceries (1941) we see another slew of fake and parody product names and company names; "Jelly Bean Co." jelly beans, "Speeds" premium hams, "Guavida Rock Co.", "Star Products", "Sid's" mustard, "Fountain Spray Candy Co.", "Weate Company", "Uama Biscuit Co.", "Superguy Co." soap chips.



enter image description here






share|improve this answer















Looney Tunes brands



In Fast and Furry-ous (1949) Wile E. Coyote uses an "Ace" brand electric motor.



enter image description here



and "Fleet-Foot" jet-propelled tennis shoes.



enter image description here





In Beep, Beep! (1952) Wile E. Coyote uses an empty "Harris Soup" box as a stand. This, presumably was an homage to animator Ken Harris.



enter image description here





In Zipping Along (1953) we see another Ace product, steel shot.



enter image description here





In Ready, Set, Zoom! (1955), our hapless protagonist travels through a mine owned by the "Selzer Mining Co.", presumably an homage to producer Eddie Selzer.



enter image description here





In Zoom and Bored (1957) Wile E. Coyote has gotten himself an "Ahab" branded harpoon gun.



enter image description here





In Going! Going! Gosh! we find that Wile E. Coyote has bought an "Excelsior" branded electric fan.



enter image description here





In Rushing Roulette (1965) we encounter "Ajax" brand glue.



enter image description here



and what appears to be a Greyhound branded bus. Note that this is a real brand, not a fictional one.



enter image description here





In Zip 'n' Snort (1961) we also see another Ajax product, bird seed.



enter image description here





In Duck Dodgers In The 24½th Century (1952) Marvin has a tendency to use "A-1" branded products, a brand that's also seen (occasionally) in the early Looney Tunes cartoons.



enter image description here





In Compressed Hare (1961), Bugs Bunny orders a "Zajaxi" branded dynamo to use against Wile E. Coyote.



enter image description here





In Adventures of the Road Runner (1962) we see that Wile E. Coyote has foolishly been buying "Road-Runner Blue-Print Co." branded blueprints.



enter image description here





In To Beep or Not to Beep (1963) we see that the Wile E. Coyote has foolishly bought a giant (and consistently defective) catapult from the "Road-Runner Manufacturing Co."



enter image description here





Looney-Tunes co-branded adverts



In this series of Plymouth Cars commercial (this one from 1968), we learn that Ajax also manufacture rocket cars.



enter image description here



In the 1969 commercial, we see that Ajax have diversified into 'dumping'.



enter image description here



And in this 1970 commercial, Ajax evidently sell 'car crushers' as well.



enter image description here





In a series of commercials for Energizer Batteries, Wile E. Coyote finds that their fictional rival brand "SUPERVOLT" are (as usual) underwhelming.



enter image description here





In the late 1960s, Warner Bros came up with the idea for a branded Road Runner cereal called "Post's Beep Beep Cereal" and even went as far as mocking up an animatic to show Post Cereals executives what the advert might look like. Since the brand only existed on paper (the deal wasn't finalised), this seems to fall into the category of 'fictional'.



enter image description here





In Tiny Toon Adventures, toons have a choice of attending Acme Looniversity or its rival, "Perfecto Prep" as seen in The Acme Bowl (1990) and other episodes.



enter image description here





Merry Melodies/Looney Tunes brands



In Cheese Chasers (1952) Hubie and Herbert raid a cheese factory called "Hunka Cheese Co."



enter image description here





In Mouse Wreckers (1949), Claude Cat has a green bottle of "Harris" hair tonic in his medicine cabinet.



enter image description here





In Smile, Darn Ya, Smile (1931) Foxy the trolley engineer has adverts on his trolley bus for "Sniff Brothers" cough drops and "Risk" Tires



enter image description here





In The Dish Ran Away with the Spoon (1933), we see some "Sunrise" prunes in the background of the kitchen.



enter image description here





In Buddy's Day Out (1933), our hero is implored to smoke "Gazelles" cigarettes and "Myrol" cigarettes.



enter image description here





In Buddy's Beer Garden (1933), Buddy serves "Bock" beer.



enter image description here





In Sittin' on a Backyard Fence (1933), the alleycats are sitting on a fence with posters that advertise two distinctive brands; "Bull Dernem" tobacco and "Tarnation" milk.



enter image description here





How Do I Know It's Sunday? (1934) features a veritable cornucopia of fake and parody brands; "Anchor" sardines, "Pink Ribbon" malt, "American Biscuit Baking Co." crackers, "Aunt Mamie" and "Aunt Eliza" pancake flour, "Scream" wheat, "Old Maid" cleanser, "Burno" canned heat, "Searchlight" cleanser, "Jamble Inc." cleaner, "MB Spice Co." tinned peppers, "Garo" syrup, "Pratts" biscuits, "Sunny Side" raisins, "Kelly's" corn flakes, "Best-o" toilet paper, "Norm's" crackers and "Tibby" evaporated milk.



enter image description here





In Milk and Money (1936), Porky Pig works for the "Fuller Water Milk Co." as a milkman.



enter image description here





In Wholly Smoke (1938) Porky Pig encounters a range of cigarette brands; "El Ropo" cigars, "Union" tobacco, "Barkley Square" tobacco, "Picadilly Sprouts" cheroots, "Velour" smoking tobacco and "The Hibernian Tobacco Co.", makers of 'Genuine Bossy Flakes'.



enter image description here





In You're An Education (1938),we learn that travellers can travel via a boat from the "Alaska Steamship Company"



enter image description here





In The Night-Watchman (1938), Tommy Cat walks past another A-1 product, a box of pretzels.



enter image description here





In The Sour Puss (1940) we see another company name, "Consolidated Pants". Interestingly, this is also the first mention of "Acme" as a company name.



enter image description here





In Tortoise Beats Hare, Cecil Turtle uses a "Bell Turtlephone Co." branded telephone box to call his family.



enter image description here





In Goofy Groceries (1941) we see another slew of fake and parody product names and company names; "Jelly Bean Co." jelly beans, "Speeds" premium hams, "Guavida Rock Co.", "Star Products", "Sid's" mustard, "Fountain Spray Candy Co.", "Weate Company", "Uama Biscuit Co.", "Superguy Co." soap chips.



enter image description here







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 11 hours ago

























answered Feb 9 at 22:06









ValorumValorum

404k10629393162




404k10629393162








  • 32





    I am simply amazed. The question was asked yesterday at 21:30. Your full answer was done about 12 hours later, including a night. Out of curiosity: how can someone be so knowledgeable about cartoon (and TV details, in general) to dig these up? I answer technical questions and these are easy: if I know the answer, it is a matter of sourcing it correctly, but the sources are usually limited (documentation) and I know where to look for them. Or I have an opinion and it is even simpler. Here you had to dig into cartoons! Knowing which to ding into! Incredible.

    – WoJ
    Feb 10 at 17:27






  • 42





    @WoJ - Connor Ratliff's twitter feed was an enormous help, as was the Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runnerr which mentions a variety of other brands and (helpfully) the episodes in which they're found. I also watched about 40 episodes (at 48x speed) to see if I'd missed anything.

    – Valorum
    Feb 10 at 18:13








  • 2





    F***ing awesome answer!

    – Danny3414
    2 days ago














  • 32





    I am simply amazed. The question was asked yesterday at 21:30. Your full answer was done about 12 hours later, including a night. Out of curiosity: how can someone be so knowledgeable about cartoon (and TV details, in general) to dig these up? I answer technical questions and these are easy: if I know the answer, it is a matter of sourcing it correctly, but the sources are usually limited (documentation) and I know where to look for them. Or I have an opinion and it is even simpler. Here you had to dig into cartoons! Knowing which to ding into! Incredible.

    – WoJ
    Feb 10 at 17:27






  • 42





    @WoJ - Connor Ratliff's twitter feed was an enormous help, as was the Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runnerr which mentions a variety of other brands and (helpfully) the episodes in which they're found. I also watched about 40 episodes (at 48x speed) to see if I'd missed anything.

    – Valorum
    Feb 10 at 18:13








  • 2





    F***ing awesome answer!

    – Danny3414
    2 days ago








32




32





I am simply amazed. The question was asked yesterday at 21:30. Your full answer was done about 12 hours later, including a night. Out of curiosity: how can someone be so knowledgeable about cartoon (and TV details, in general) to dig these up? I answer technical questions and these are easy: if I know the answer, it is a matter of sourcing it correctly, but the sources are usually limited (documentation) and I know where to look for them. Or I have an opinion and it is even simpler. Here you had to dig into cartoons! Knowing which to ding into! Incredible.

– WoJ
Feb 10 at 17:27





I am simply amazed. The question was asked yesterday at 21:30. Your full answer was done about 12 hours later, including a night. Out of curiosity: how can someone be so knowledgeable about cartoon (and TV details, in general) to dig these up? I answer technical questions and these are easy: if I know the answer, it is a matter of sourcing it correctly, but the sources are usually limited (documentation) and I know where to look for them. Or I have an opinion and it is even simpler. Here you had to dig into cartoons! Knowing which to ding into! Incredible.

– WoJ
Feb 10 at 17:27




42




42





@WoJ - Connor Ratliff's twitter feed was an enormous help, as was the Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runnerr which mentions a variety of other brands and (helpfully) the episodes in which they're found. I also watched about 40 episodes (at 48x speed) to see if I'd missed anything.

– Valorum
Feb 10 at 18:13







@WoJ - Connor Ratliff's twitter feed was an enormous help, as was the Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runnerr which mentions a variety of other brands and (helpfully) the episodes in which they're found. I also watched about 40 episodes (at 48x speed) to see if I'd missed anything.

– Valorum
Feb 10 at 18:13






2




2





F***ing awesome answer!

– Danny3414
2 days ago





F***ing awesome answer!

– Danny3414
2 days ago


















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