Thursday 4 April 2013

Cartoon Wallpaper

source(google.com.pk)
Cartoon Wallpaper Biography

These cartoon wallpapers are funny, relaxing and will bring some joy to your desktop screen. Having a colored wallpaper often makes the user more happy because he forgets about all the problems people have in their life. But having a colored cartoon wallpaper brings amazing memories to the user when he was a child and he was fighting with his brother for cartoon heroes.
Cartoons make people happy and joyous inside. It doesn’t where you’re from, because cartoons are all around us. We see them in billboards, on T.V., in books and magazines, even in campaigns and events! And wallpapers are simply our way of making our desktops more personal and more interesting to us and to the people who view our PCs! Below you’ll find 35 funny, creative, and interesting cartoon wallpapers free for you to download! In which you’ll surely find the one that suits you and your interests, or even more than just one!
What a Cartoon! is an American animation showcase project created by Fred Seibert for Hanna-Barbera Cartoons to be run on Cartoon Network. The project consisted of 71 short cartoons, intended to return creative power to animators and artists, by recreating the atmospheres that spawned the great cartoon characters of the mid-20th century. Each of 71 short cartoons mirrored the structure of a theatrical cartoon, with each film being based on an original storyboard drawn and written by its artist or creator.
The shorts from the project first aired on February 20, 1995, and were promoted as World Premiere Toons. During the original run of the shorts the series was retitled as The What a Cartoon! Show until the final short aired August 17, 2001. The project served as the launching point for multiple successful Cartoon Network series, including Dexter's Laboratory, Johnny Bravo, Cow and Chicken, The Powerpuff Girls, Courage the Cowardly Dog, Mike, Lu & Og, and Codename: Kids Next Door as well as a precursor to Fox's Family Guy. The series is influential for birthing a slew of original Cartoon Network hits and helping to revive television animation in the 1990s. Once had several original series, it originated Cartoon Cartoons.
He’s the little yellow canary bird that is the eternal target of Sylvester the Cat.
Tweety usually benefits from either the intercession of outsiders, such as Granny or one of the generic bulldogs that infest WB cartoons, or just plain cartoon laws of gravity and luck.
On occasion, and this was particularly true in his first few cartoons, Tweety would take the offensive in protecting himself. 

Tweety was the creation of Bob Clampett, who had a fascination with baby birds he fondly remembered from nature films, as well as a baby picture of himself he remembered rather less fondly.
While WB had had similar birds before, Clampett gave the bird a lisping baby voice, a head proportioned like a baby, and a temperament borrowed perhaps from the Red Skelton character of Junior, the Mean Widdle Kid.
In his debut in “A Tale of Two Kitties” and in the follow-ups “Birdy and the Beast” and “A Gruesome Twosome,” Tweety shows that he is no helpless little orphan, as he uses gasoline, hand grenades, dynamite and clubs to protect himself. 

Originally pink, Tweety was changed to yellow, after censors complained.
Clampett did some of the early preliminary work on “Tweetie Pie” before turning the project over to Friz Freleng, who steered it to an Oscar-winning cartoon.
The cartoon has caused some confusion in the name of the character. Sometimes the character is referred to as Tweety, but other times the character is referred to as Tweetie Pie, muddying the situation. In “Tree Cornered Tweety”, Tweety appears in an Automat window labeled Tweety Pie, right next to the Lemon Pie. Tweety makes a cameo in "No Barking," saying his catch-phrase "I Tawt I Taw a Puddy Tat.".
Putty Tat has also been spelled Puddy Tat, which is now the officially endorsed spelling.
Mel Blanc recorded a hit song "I Taut I Taw a Puddy-Tat" (words and music by Alan Livingston, Billy May and Warren Foster) in 1950. 

Joe Alaskey now does the voice of Tweety.
Alaskey is also a very talented "on-camera" actor, guest starring on numerous television series, including "The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air," "Growing Pains," and "Night Court.".
He served as the voice of Richard Nixon in the Oscar-winning feature film "Forrest Gump,” as well as the voice of the oh-so-irreverent Daffy Duck, serving as presenter during the 67th Annual Academy Awards ceremony.
Alaskey can also he heard as the voice of Stinkie in Steven Spielberg's "Casper."

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