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Girl Gets Answer Very Wrong
What are ya? Yella?
(Throws tin-pan makeshift frisbee at Mad Dog Tannen.)
Bob Dylan on The Mystery of Creativity
I actually tried to put together a Tin Pan Alley que one time, even had a tin pan on the head-cat to go with it, but sadly it died in it's infancy.
Stevie Ray does a rockin' version of Superstition
Isn't it Tin Pan Alley, not Ten Pin Alley? You clearly spend too much time bowling...
Coal Black and de Sebben Dwarfs (1943) Banned Looney Toons
Continued:
Much is often also made of the “exceptional” research that Clampett and his animators undertook (they visited night-clubs and “drafted” African-African musicians and actors) to provide an accurate, celebratory, authentic and incorporative vision of urban African-American culture of the time. Along with Tin Pan Alley Cats (1943) it highlights Clampett's fascination with African-American street culture, its syncopation and language, pushing its potent stereotypes to the extremes of comic absurdity.
Also, as with many of Clampett's cartoons, one can sense the direct influence of comic books, popular music, street culture, live-action cinema and contemporary art (especially surrealism) upon these two films. Like much of Clampett's best work, these films are syncopated snapshots of a particular time, place and set of social mores. So it is hardly surprising to discover that the greatest period of Clampett's tenure at Warners coincides with the ramped-up stereotypes encouraged by the World War II era. As Tim Onosko argues, “Clampett created an entirely new and irreverent style of animated filmmaking more suited to the era than either Disney or Fleischer” (17). Although Onosko's parochial account unnecessarily favours Clampett at the expense of his Warners' colleagues, as well as Avery at MGM, it does pinpoint the ascension of the studio to the pinnacle of Hollywood short animation during this period and accurately regards Clampett's work as a cornerstone of this process.
To me that is what this video is, a snapshot of that era, not a racist hate film.