We all know that cartoons can be for kids, adults, or adults who wish they were still
kids.
But every so often, somebody decides that a cartoon isn�t suitable for any audience.
Some of these cartoons are racist, some are violent, and some are downright dangerous.
26 banned cartoon that was actualy Awesome but banned you Won't not Believe.
list 26 Hittin' the Trail for Hallelujah Land At that time, United Artists owned the rights
to most Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons.
Hittin' the Trail for Hallelujah land and ten other cartoons were deemed to feature
racist depictions of African Americans that were too integral to the films for simple
cuts to make them palatable for modern audiences.
list 25 Sunday Go to Meetin' Time Warner Bros. released Sunday Go to Meetin'
Time in American theaters on August 8, 1936.
Since 1968, the cartoon has been withheld from distribution.
At that time, United Artists owned the rights to color Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies
cartoons before August 1948.
Sunday Go to Meetin' Time and ten other cartoons were deemed to feature racist depictions of
African Americans, making them too integral to the films for simple cuts to make them
palatable for modern audiences.
These eleven cartoons make up the so-called Censored Eleven.
list 24 Clean Pastures Schlesinger and Warner Bros. had problems
with Clean Pastures from the start.
Hollywood censors alleged that the film ran afoul of the Hays Production Code because
it burlesqued religion.
Later commentators surmise that the censors also objected to the portrayal of a Heaven
run by African Americans.
In 1968, the short's stereotypical portrayal of black characters prompted United Artists
to withhold it from distribution as one of the infamous Censored Eleven.
list 23 Uncle Tom's Bungalow In 1968 the cartoon became a part of the Censored
Eleven, a group of cartoons banned from syndication by the television arm of United Artists due
to the controversy surrounding their racially stereotypical content.
list 22 Jungle Jitters The cartoon features a number of racial stereotypes
throughout the short (such as people in blackface), which prompted United Artists to withhold
this cartoon from syndication in 1968, making it one of the Censored Eleven.
list 21 The Isle of Pingo Pongo This cartoon directed by Tex Avery.
cartoons, was banned in 1968 and added to the Censored 11 category by United Artists,
the owner of distribution rights of the short and UA believed that no amount of editing
could make it allowed to be distributed on United States television.
It is the only Egghead cartoon on the list.
list 20 All This and Rabbit Stew After copyright on All This and Rabbit Stew
expired in 1969, the film fell into the public domain.
The cartoon has been considered highly controversial due to racial stereotyping, which prompted
United Artists to withhold this cartoon from syndication a year before it entered the public
domain, making it one of the Censored Eleven.
list 19 Coal Black and de Sebben Dwarfs The racially stereotyped portrayals of African-Americans
in Coal Black and the other "Censored Eleven" cartoons led to their being suppressed from
television broadcast.
In 1968, United Artists, which then owned the rights to the pre-August 1948[4] Warner
Bros. cartoon library, officially banned the cartoons from circulation, and they have not
been officially broadcast or released on home video since - even as the rights returned
to Warners.
list 18 Tin Pan Alley Cats Following the Civil Rights Movement of the
1960s, United Artists withheld Tin Pan Alley Cats, along with the rest of the "Censored
Eleven", from American television in 1968.
Turner Entertainment (today owned by Time Warner) acquired the rights to these cartoons
in 1986, and has continued to withhold it from release.
list 17 Angel Puss Angel Puss was released on June 3, 1944, by
Warner Bros.
Pictures as part of its Looney Tunes series.Because the film contains racist portrayals of African-Americans,
it is no longer available in any type of authorized release and is among the group of controversial
cartoons known to animation buffs as the Censored Eleven.
Angel Puss is the only Chuck Jones film and the only Looney Tunes release on the list.
list 16 Goldilocks and the Jivin' Bears In these Cartoon all of the characters are
drawn in blackface style.
Because the film contains racist portrayals of African-Americans, it is no longer available
in any type of authorized release and is among the group of controversial cartoons known
to animation buffs as the Censored Eleven.
list 15 SONG OF THE SOUTH Disney�s live-action/animation hybrid based
on the tales of the fictional Uncle Remus has been the subject of controversy since
its release in 1946.
The film�s detractors take issue with its overly rosy depiction of African-American
life in the South during the late 1800s.
Because Disney is averse to controversy, it�s been out of print for decades in the U.S.
list 14 BUGS BUNNY NIPS THE NIPS
The propaganda cartoons of the era showed everything from racy depictions of women in
shorts intended for the troops to extremely racist depictions of Japanese soldiers to
Donald Duck being convinced to do his taxes in order to �defeat the Axis.� Some war
cartoons have been released on DVDs marketed strictly to adult film and animation fans.
Others, like the cringe-inducingly titled �Bugs Bunny Nips the Nips,� remain locked
away in the proverbial vaults.
list 13 RUDE REMOVAL,� DEXTER�S LABORATORY One of the skeletons in Cartoon Network�s
closet is �Rude Removal,� a Dexter�s Laboratory episode that was never aired in
the U.S. becuse of abusive words.
The obscene language is all bleeped out, but between context and some pretty accurate lip-synch,
viewers can get an idea of what the rude Dexter and Dee-Dee are saying.
list 12 Banned Cartoon: �Buffalo Gals� (1998)
It�s amazing the line, �Oh, the Buffalo Gals, a biker group that randomly breaks into
people�s houses and chews on their carpet� got past the �Cow and Chicken� censors
in the first place.
Thank God it did.
list 11 One Beer� from �Tiny Toon Adventures� (1991)
�One Beer� is an oddly moralistic episode of �Tiny Toon Adventures� that showed
youngsters everywhere what would happen if they drank beer.
They�d drive drunk and kill themselves, that�s what would happen.
Needless to say, it only aired once in 1991, and thousands of nine year olds have gotten
into car accidents since.
list 10 Song of the South Song of The South features Uncle Remus, speaking
in a dialect reminiscent of post Civil War setting (think how blacks were portrayed in
Gone With the Wind) and inappropriate for modern day viewing.
Disney stopped releasing the film in 1986.
list 9 Talespin
In this episode, Baloo transports a bomb via plane to a foreign country, in hopes that
the bombing would cause a war to break out, Everything that was wrong with this episode
� terrorist message, bombs on planes, genocide, and war � ultimately and unsurprisingly
got this episode banned permanently.
list 8 Gargoyles Gargoyles was a critically acclaimed cartoon
series that truly confirmed the saying �The road to hell is paved with good intentions.�
Wanting to raise some warning flags on the matter of gun control and violence,the episode
Deadly Force dealt with this issue in a highly controversial way.
When Broadway shoots Elisa by accident with a gun considered to be a toy, the latter is
afterward showed lying in a pool of her own blood.The episode was initially banned, then
re-aired in a censored version
list 7 Sunday Go to Meetin� Time This cartoon takes place in a small southern
town and follows a protagonist named Nicodemus.
The crudely depicted main character is drawn with dark black skin, huge lips, and a monkey-esque
physique.
He is found playing dice in the beginning and after being coaxed to go to church he
decides to skip and go steal some chickens instead.
Due to abundance of racial stereotypes displayed quickly earned this cartoon a spot on the
banned cartoon list.
list 6 Popetown Banned because...: It's not difficult to see
why this cartoon kicked up a stink.
It depicted the Pope as an infantile idiot, and other high-ranking Catholics as corrupt
and sexually deviant.
Yikes.
Predictably, the series, which included the voice talents of Ruby Wax, Jerry Hall and
Little Britain's Matt Lucas, was attacked by Roman Catholics and quickly banned soon
after it premiered in Britain in 2005.
list 5 SAILOR MOON � NEPTUNE & URANUS A notable difference of the series is the
censorship of material.[1][2] For scenes of near-nudity, such as transformation sequences,
body lines were removed around the breasts and pubic regions, and for bathing scenes,
the situation was solved by either digitally "raising" the water level around the cleavage
or by eliminating body visibility by toning the water a solid color with the rest of the
body being hidden.
There were removals of "any violence", including violence toward children.
list 4 Speedy Gonzales The famous Looney Tunes mouse, a role model
for Mexicans and Latin American�s alike � pulled from the air in 1999 by Cartoon
Network They went on record claiming Speedy and the
characters around him were a poor role model for kids, ethnic stereotypes in the form of
lazy and alcohol-addicted characters
list 3 Dexter's Laboratory - Rude Removal In this episode, Dexter creates a machine
that separates good traits and bad, creating a clone that swears and is rude throughout
the episode.
This was never aired on TV but it was screened during the 1998 World Animation Celebration
to good reviews.
Genndy Tartakovsky is known for airing this episode on some of his appearances.
list 2 Pokemon - Computer Soldier Porygon (1997)
banned because Dangerous For Health Computer Soldier Porygon" aired in Japan on December
16, 1997.
This episode was banned due to a scene with a huge explosion that flashes red and blue
lights, making this scene extremely intense.
These flashes were extremely bright, blinking at a rate of 12 Hz for about 4 seconds in
almost full screen, and then for 2 seconds in outright full screen.
At those moments of bright flashes, audiences started to complain of blurred vision, headaches,
dizziness, and nausea.
A few people even had seizures, blindness, convulsions, and lost consciousness.
list 1 Abortion: Family Guy - Partial Terms of Endearment (2010)
The episode was forbidden from airing in the US due to concerns over its portrayal of the
controversial subject of abortion.
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