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JERRY BECK
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AMID AMIDI
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Independence Day
by jerry
July 4, 2007 12:01 am


Have a happy Fourth of July.

07/4/07  9:25am
Arthur Foame says:

Yeah, propaganda is fun. Often cute too.

07/4/07  12:04pm
Robert says:

Wow, I’ve never seen that one before. Looks like they had that “uncanny valley” thing going long before CG made it easy to do.

07/4/07  12:15pm
Nonimus says:

When he says, “one nation … indivisible,” seems like “under God” has been edited out.

07/4/07  12:22pm
GeeVee says:

Maybe propagandistic but I’ll take a country that actually likes itself (with good reason) over the super-polarized / run-by-zealot-clowns one we have now.

Porky for President! At least he gets it.

07/4/07  1:09pm
red pill junkie says:

Isn’t interesting that Uncle Sam (which has always creeped me out, no matter how hard they tried to portray him as a benevolent elder) gives his propaganda speech to Porky, one of the most GULLIBLE characters of the Looney Tunes? I wonder what would have Bugs said?

07/4/07  1:22pm
Autonomic says:

Notice how the phrase “under God” had not been added at that point.

07/4/07  3:33pm
Inkan1969 says:

Yep, I don’t think “under God” was added until the 1950’s, in an attack against Godless Communism.

Patriotic cartoons. My favorite is “Yankee Doodle Bugs”, without a doubt. ( “Hey Granny, do these give you any ideas?” )

07/4/07  5:20pm
GhaleonQ says:

“seems like “under Godâ€? has been edited out.”

*smacks forehead*

07/4/07  7:47pm
David says:

Happy Independence Day to Cartoon Brewsters and all the ships at
sea !

I wonder if the word “propaganda” is being tossed around here too casually in describing this cartoon ? Is an overtly patriotic cartoon produced at a time when the dark clouds of World War II were gathering (and WW II already underway in Europe) necessarily make it “propaganda” , with all the negative connotations that word carries ?

07/4/07  8:03pm
street says:

rotoscope-tastic!

07/4/07  11:14pm
J. J. Hunsecker says:

The phrase “under God” was not omitted from the cartoon, because it did not exist in the Pledge of Aliegence at that time. It was added in 1954.

You can read about it here:
http://www.religioustolerance.org/nat_pled1.htm

Oh, and I also find Uncle Sam to be super creepy in this cartoon. I believe it was animated by Robert McKimson. According to Chuck Jones, McKimson animated it without the aid of the rotoscope.

07/4/07  11:49pm
Keith Paynter says:

IIR, the line “To arms! To arms!” was used over the familiar “The British are coming!” in order not to offend the U.K. market.

07/5/07  8:14am
John says:

It’s so refreshing to hear the pledge of our forefathers without the superstitious addition from the 50’s.

07/5/07  10:54am
Christian says:

You can call the cartoon propaganda but I actually think America’s a great place.

07/5/07  12:42pm
Bill Field says:

I love this Porky, he seems childlike and innocent, as opposed to the frustrated adult when he teamed with Sylvester or Daffy.

07/8/07  4:59pm

I find it hard to believe rotoscoping WASN’T used in this toon. Uncle Sam reminds me too much of Fleisher’s Gulliver.

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