

Gruesome Gorilla, Charlie Dog and the Instant Martians as more original characters have been confirmed to appear along the way. Frankenbeans, Witch Hazel, Petunia Pig, the French Horse, Rocky, Mugsy, Clancy Cop, the Russian Dog, the Rich Lady, Foghorn Leghorn, Barnyard Dawg, The Weasel, Hector the Bulldog, Marvin the Martian, the Dead End Kid, the Judge, Pete Puma, Hubie, Bertie, Claude Cat, Fred Sheepdog, George Wolf, Gruesome Gorilla, Mrs. Coyote, Cecil Turtle, Sam Sheepdog, Ralph Wolf, the Fly, Cicero Pig, Taz, Gossamer, Dr. The series brings all of the Looney Tunes together under one roof, having already reintroduced Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Tweety, Sylvester, Porky Pig, The Gremlin, Elmer Fudd, The Gashouse Gorillas, Yosemite Sam, Granny, Doctor Quack, Beaky Buzzard, Mama Buzzard, Road Runner, Wile E. The animation was directed by Joey Capps, who also did animation work on Adult Swim's Superjail!. Animation logo that was first shown before Teen Titans Go! To the Movies. The initial designs for Looney Tunes Cartoons were previewed in the Warner Bros. The characters are designed by Jim Soper, with the model sheets copyright dating back to 2018. Register and Browngardt serve as executive producers for the series. The style of the series is reminiscent of the classic Looney Tunes shorts made by Tex Avery, Bob Clampett, Chuck Jones, Friz Freleng, Robert McKimson and others. Animation announced a new series in June 2018, to "consist of 1,000 minutes spread across 1–6 minute shorts each season", be released in 2019 and featuring "the brand's marquee characters voiced by their current voice actors in simple gag-driven and visually vibrant stories". He then began casting, hiring Eric Bauza, and as an admirer of Jim Soper's art on Instagram, hired him as a character designer. Browngardt expressed that he wanted to direct it in the spirit of the classic 1940s cartoons. She was surprised that he was a fan of Looney Tunes and booked him a meeting with studio president, Sam Register. They discussed a project in which he was not interested, and as they wrapped up lunch, Pete said, "You know, what I really want to do is to direct a Looney Tunes short". In 2017, after Browngardt finished Uncle Grandpa, he met with Audrey Diehl, the creative executive at Warner Bros., at a lunch meeting. Peter Browngardt came up with the idea with rebooting the Looney Tunes in its classic 1940s form.
