Cartoons Quotes
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I'm not up on today's television for children, because it's mostly cartoons that don't seem to interest me.
Oswald is an interesting character. Disney lost the rights to him in 1928 to Universal, who was distributing the cartoons and basically handed him over to Walter Lantz.
I've loved cartoons all along. Most people outgrow that when they hit 10 or 12, I guess, but I never did. I'm not sure why.
In cartoons, in movies, time passes differently. There are flashbacks and flashfowards.
Animated editorial cartoons are completely different from static editorial cartoons.
Every era has its cartoon rich guys, but most of them are actual cartoons - Daddy Warbucks, Scrooge McDuck, C. Montgomery Burns.
When I was starting out in 1988, I was doing cartoons on President George H. W. Bush, Iraq and the fall of Soviet Union.
For an encore, I might do health-care cartoons using my own blood. That will be my last act.
Drawings don't have a point. Cartoons, you want to have an opinion; you want them to express a viewpoint.
Instead of watching cartoons when I was little, I had Russian ballet videos from, like, the 1950s and 1940s.
And, uh, I've got about six thousand cartoons up there, also books and papers.
I don't like cartoons that take place in Nowhereville. I like cartoons where I know where they're happening.
I ran development and programming at Disney TV animation. We did a lot of cartoons.
I don't think I have any guilt or embarrassment about any of the TV shows I watch. Maybe the fact that the shows I can watch over and over again are cartoons like 'Bob's Burgers' and 'American Dad' and 'Rick & Morty.'
Cartoons are like fruit flies. Biologists use fruit flies because their large chromosomes and short life cycle make them ideal for studying hereditary changes.
I'm a product of the 1970s, so I have a short attention span. You know, I grew up on cartoons and half-hour shows. So the stories that I'm interested in grab my attention very quickly, and they have to keep my attention.
My parents are cartoons. When they come up and visit, they're hilarious. My mother somehow finds a way to get in the way of everything.
I was a really big fan of cartoons growing up, and I loved to read too much into them most of the time.
I actually grew up watching a lot of these cartoons - a lot of the animated series. 'Batman: The Animated Series,' 'Justice League,' all the stuff that would come onto Cartoon Network.
I remember watching Looney Tunes cartoons and having the music stuck in my head.
I was diagnosed with ADD - see also: raised on sugary cereals and cartoons - and manic depression. So I was prescribed Ritalin for the ADD, and for the manic imbalances I was prescribed mostly benzodiazepines, which I loved, and antidepressants.
I have no idea what readership is of written editorials, but it doesn't come anywhere close to the readership of editorial cartoons.
I went to a catholic public school St Helens and learned English by watching bugs bunny cartoons.
I have a daughter and she's the greatest thing that ever happened to me. She gives me a good excuse to watch cartoons.
It's great that we can, however subtly, offer important lessons through cartoons that it's important to protect the environment.
Editorial cartoons are about concept. The illustration is merely a vehicle to convey a point of view. We're here to protect and inform the public, to attack and repel those who do not agree with our long-term shared interest.
I watched a ton of cartoons growing up, but I don't remember specifically what networks they were on, I'll be honest. But I did like cartoons as a kid.
Cartoons have always been an enjoyment to me... a relaxation... I get my ideas from everyday events.
I was unable to sleep and I would stay up and draw these little cartoons. Then a friend showed them around. Before I knew it I was a cartoonist.
I've never really thought about competing with cartoons. If it ever gets to that point, then just shoot me.
As far as cartoons go, I watched a lot of 'Ed, Edd, n Eddy' when I was a kid.
I get inspired from all different kinds of places - cartoons, comic books, movies and things like that.
I love cartoons, I love comic books and graphic novels. 'Batman: The Animated Series' was a huge influence on me when I was younger.
My cartoons haven't been about the politics of the day or about the personalities; I'm more interested in campaigning about the issues.
I first pitched the idea of doing a series of cartoons based on Bible stories. They didn't much like it.
The cartoons which I enjoy have caused some kind of out rage, but they have got people talking about these issues out in the open and in essence that's what its all about.
I was very lucky all three newspapers approached me and asked me to draw their cartoons for them.
As soon as I found out how compartmentalized the industry was, I realized, Well, no wonder the cartoons are so bad.
My intended audience was everybody. I just want to make cartoons for human beings.
As a kid, I just loved cartoons. And as the credits went by, I'd study those names and then try to figure how I could get hired to do what Mel Blanc and Daws Butler did. Create all of these great voices for animated characters.
Why does this person who is sitting behind a desk and never watches cartoons is arguing about what cartoons should be like. Its so creepy realizing that this person is a lunatic.
I grew up on comics and cartoons. So, as an adult, I like comics and cartoons.
I watch the same cartoons over and over again. I watch Adult Swim. I watch 'Futurama' repeatedly.
One of my favourite Japanese cartoons is 'Yasuragi no Yakata,' written by the famous Fujiko Fujio.
Newspapers across the country and the world have published cartoons that have gone beyond reasonable differences of opinion and expanded into the realm of antisemitism.
Every week when my batch of weekly cartoons would go to FedEx, it felt like a small miracle. Then in a few days, it's 'Here we go again.'
I notice when I'm at a party where I don't know anybody - even if I have nothing in common with somebody - we can still talk because we were raised by the same TV and cartoons and movies.
I'm not into superhero movies, but I love cartoons. Tweety bird is my favourite.
98% of the people who get the magazine say they read the cartoons first - and the other 2% are lying.
I think that, ultimately, there are so many characters in G.I. Joe that even all the iterations - the comics and the different cartoons and everything - have been a big ensemble. Lots of crossing storylines and stuff.
I grew up on Charles Addams' cartoons, particularly 'The Addams Family,' and Uncle Fester was always one of my favorites.
Around 2000, I was working on cartoons like 'PB&J Otter' and 'Doug.'
At 16, I was drawing cartoons, and I wanted to carry on being a cartoonist.
I think more influential than Emily Dickinson or Coleridge or Wordsworth on my imagination were Warner Brothers, Merrie Melodies, and Loony Tunes cartoons.
In Roslyn, Pennsylvania, we started our real-life family circus. They provided the inspiration for my cartoons. I provided the perspiration.
I can still do clothing, movies, cartoons. I'mma get mine regardless. Whether I put an album out or not, I'm still gonna see a check.
True net-heads sometimes resort to punctuation cartoons to get around the absence of inflection.
Instead of cartoons, I was the kid who was watching Food Network, falling asleep to Emeril and Rachael Ray.
Cartoons are the best stuff on TV. 'Wonder Showzen,' 'Aqua Teen,' 'SpongeBob,' and, of course, 'South Park' - one of the funniest shows ever made.
A lot of people get emotional in movies that are cartoons, but not in TV shows.
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