The most perfect example would be Warner Brothers who aired their first cartoon in 1929. The Cartoon was named Bosko, the Talk-Ink Kid and starred a character named Bosko who was a stereo typed African American boy, who looked like a monkey more than a human (see Fig. 1). These cartoons, intentionally or not, portrayed an image of the social culture at that time:
"We never knew what he was," Ising claimed in an interview, years later. Actually, despite his little black animal nose, audiences could easily see that he was a caricatured black boy unacceptably stereotyped by today's standards, but not mean-spirited, nor considered insulting by the standards of the time" -Don Markstein's Toonopedia
The creator of these cartoons, Leon Schlesinger, then created Looney Tunes in 1930 followed by Merry Melodies in 1931. Originally they were made as two distinct series, however these two shows would become indistinguishable in the later years. These cartoons were also used as cultural satire, in fact a handful of these cartoons made around World War II are no longer aired and were made unavailable for sale due to their racial stereotypes of African Americans, Germans, Japanese, Italians, and Jews. One of the more popular characters of the series, Speedy Gonzalez, was also made unavailable due to its depiction of Mexicans. This has been discouraging to some animation enthusiasts who feel that these shorts should be open to the public. The impact of World War II …show more content…
Its use is simply to distinguish between the Golden Age of Cartoons. John K., the creator of Ren and Stimpy, distinguishes the dark age of cartoons as the time where power was taken from the animator and given to the network. The era can be epitomized by the cartoons of the 1960's. It must be understood that many of the cartoons discussed in the above paragraph were made to be in a movie theatre. When television was invented, and more specifically, made affordable to most people and not limited to prime time, it became a staple in a persons every day life. Each of the new born networks had to create and produce their own shows. When it came to creating cartoons, this lead to a dramatic change in power structure giving birth do the dark ages of cartoons. Contrary to the silver screen power arrangement, networks created their own cartoons and used animators as pawns. This coupled with the race to create newer shows in bulk lead to what I refer to as assembly line cartoons. These are cartoons created from a basic qualitative equation where writers sit around a table and build a show on what has worked before. Many people show a sort of nostalgic admiration for these cartoons such as Scooby Doo, the Flintstones, and the Jetsons, while others show distaste for their repetition and bad jokes. While these cartoons had something's to offer as cultural satire, they was little intertextuality and were often