Warner Bros, Looney Tunes and David Zaslav
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Warner Bros. seeks to tear down the historic single-story structure that was once home to Bugs, Daffy, Tweety and more.
From New York Daily News
Ketchup Entertainment announced Monday that it acquired worldwide distribution rights to the film for an undisclosed sum.
From Seattle Times
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It looks like the Wile E. Coyote movie will be hitting theaters, but where can you watch the original Looney Tunes with the Road Runner?
6don MSNOpinion
Boutique label Warner Archive, nestled within the larger studio, has quietly been releasing exquisite DVDs and Blu-rays for over 16 years.
The classic Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies theatrical cartoons are no longer part of Warner Bros. Discovery’s streaming service Max. The company has removed hundreds of cartoons that were produced by its legendary animation studio between the 1930s and 1960s.
With Max dumping its entire Looney Tunes catalog, fans of the cartoons do have one place they can still go for a little relief.
Four signs were posted sometime this week on Building 131 that’s located in the far corner of the lot off of Forest Lawn Drive. The signs read “buildings have feelings, too,” “save 101, history matters a ton,” and “everyone watches Looney Tunes.” A amateur artist even drew Bugs Bunny saying, “not cool, doc.”
Earlier this week, Warner Bros. caused quite a stir when it removed the classic Looney Tunes theatrical shorts from its streaming service. Although there are still ways to watch the series online via Prime Video and Apple TV purchases, the idea that a streaming service can remove even its own content is bad news for the preservation of older media.