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  1. List of shorts Original show (1995–97) The following is a list of the original shorts produced under Fred Seibert's management for What a Cartoon! by Hanna-Barbera. The shorts are listed in the order that they originally aired.

  2. This is a list of animated short films. The list is organized by decade and year, and then alphabetically. The list includes theatrical, television, and direct-to-video films with less than 40 minutes runtime. For a list of films with over 40 minutes of runtime, see List of animated films.

  3. This is a list of animated short films produced by Pixar Animation Studios . Beginning with Pixar's second film A Bug's Life, almost all subsequent Pixar feature films have been shown in theaters along with a Pixar-created original short film, known as a "short."

    • History
    • Crew
    • Broadcast History
    • Legacy
    • Broadcast and Availability
    • Revival
    • Trivia

    Origins and production

    Fred Seibert became president of Hanna-Barbera Cartoons in 1992 and helped guide the struggling animation studio into its greatest output in years with shows like 2 Stupid Dogs and SWAT Kats: The Radical Squadron. Seibert wanted the studio to produce short cartoons, in the vein of the Golden Age of American Animation. Although a project consisting of 48 shorts would cost twice as much as a normal series,Seibert's pitch to Cartoon Network involved promising 48 chances to "succeed or fail", ope...

    The What a Cartoon! staff had creators from Europe and Canada (Bruno Bozzetto), Asia (Achiu So), and the United States (Jerry Reynolds and colleague Seth MacFarlane). The crew also contained young series first timers (like Genndy Tartakovsky, Craig McCracken, Rob Renzetti, Butch Hartman, and John Dilworth), but veterans as well (like Don Jurwich, J...

    The first cartoon from the What a Cartoon! project broadcast in its entirety was "The Powerpuff Girls in Meat Fuzzy Lumkins", which made its world premiere on Monday, February 20, 1995, during a television special called the "World Premiere Toon In" (termed "President's Day Nightmare" by its producers, Williams Street). The special was hosted by Sp...

    Dexter's Laboratory was the most popular short series according to a vote held in 1995 and eventually became the first spin-off of What a Cartoon! in 1996. Two more series based on shorts, Johnny Bravo and Cow and Chicken, premiered in 1997, and The Powerpuff Girls became a weekly half-hour show in 1998. Courage the Cowardly Dog (spun-off from the ...

    The showcase aired on Boomerang at some time in the 2000's. It also aired on the Latin American network, Tooncast. On April 2020, 4 shorts of What a Cartoon! were available on the Cartoon Network streaming app as part of an old school Cartoon Network section for a limited time. The series was officially released on HBO Max in Latin America on Decem...

    An argentinian YouTuber named Elvis Del Valle shown interest on creating his own revival to What A Cartoon! under the name of Cartooncalypse which was also going to be based on Oh Yeah! Cartoons. The concept for the revival was to create a "cartoonverse" focusing on several cartoon characters living in the same universe. At diference from the origi...

    Some pilots, like Dexter's Laboratory, Johnny Bravo and Codename: Kids Next Door, were paired as regular episodes outside What a Cartoon. Some others, like The Powerpuff Girls and Courage the Cowar...

  4. February 20, 1995. Last premiered. November 28, 1997. Last aired. August 27, 2000. Show Description. Episode List. The following is a list of shorts of the What a Cartoon! project. This list only contains the original 48 shorts created for the project.

  5. What a Cartoon! is an American animated anthology series created by Fred Seibert for Cartoon Network. The shorts were produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions; by the end of the run, a Cartoon Network Studios production tag was added to some shorts to signal they were original to the network.