Advertisement · 728 × 90
#
Hashtag
#Thunderbean
Advertisement · 728 × 90
Vintage Commercials! What are some of *your* favorites??!? I can’t even recall how many times I’ve said things are busy as heck here when writing here. There’s a bunch to do, and when I’m not really tired I’m having a great time making all these various puzzles come together. I can see a time in the next year where there will be a lot more ability to concentrate on just one or two projects, with help doing others. The Thunderbean MeTV deal is lovely in that there’s about to be a whole lot of people seeing things they’ve never seen before; I love the accessibility of all these films once again finding an audience bigger than the little cartoony community. I really love the channels and their support of classic animation, with even more to come soon. My friend Milton Knight has a Kickstarter up for his independent animated film “Cat and Mouse”. Spread the word and support this film if you’re able. It’s dark subject matter for sure, exploratory and exploring new territory for him as an artist. [Click Here to help]. As we’re working on more licensing and streaming possibilities, we’ll be turning away from the special discs that we’ve had so much fun producing. Several people requested we have them up a few more days, so we’ve done so- and there’s a discount at the shop right now as well at the Thunderbean Shop. [Direct Link] * * * And onto today’s subject: What are some of your favorite vintage animated commercials? I’ve always loved collecting commercials in 16mm. There’s a lot of prints of commercials out there, and they used to be incredibly cheap on the collectors market since people would keep the shows and often cut out the commercial interrupting them, or sell the little boxes and tiny reels with them on, or sell big reels of them. Over the years it’s been fun to borrow a bunch from various collectors as well as mulling through my own collection and scanning the ones I really like. Here’s a few of my favorites from over the years. Find some of yours if you can and put a link in the comments. In this week’s and last week’s animation history class at the College for Creative Studies, we showed quite a few from the Thunderbean commercials set and the _Mid Century Modern_ Blu-rays. It was a lot of fun to see them through their eyes. **1) A Smattering of Spots (Storyboard, Inc)**. This commercial reel from the Huibley Studio is one of my favorite things to show in class. There’s so many styles and so much fun animation by so many people that worked at most of the big animation studios over the years. This is just the standard definition version. It’s on the Mid Century Modern, Volume 2 disc that we’ll get back in print at some point… **2) Coo Coo Wheats commercial (1974)** Mark Kausler animated a big chunk of this spot back in the 70s- and maybe he can tell us a little more about it too! It was a favorite of mine when it showed on WKBD, Channel 50 in Detroit. This copy is from my not-so-great telecine transfer that made it onto the first commecial disc we did- and further compressed from YouTube re-uploading— one of these days I’ll get a better copy! **3) Freakies commercial (1974)** I guess I’m taking a trip back into my childhood a little bit with this one too. Freakies was my absolute favorite for about a year and a half as a kid— then it vanished off the shelves! I still have my Freakies figures and magnets all these years later. This spot was largely animated by Preston Blair at Jack Zander’s Animation Parlor. I have a drawing from the opening shot. **4) Kellogg’s Corn Flakes with Woody Woodpecker** Is there anything better than Woody suggesting children almost get hit by cars in their pursuit of cereal? I wish there were more of these around with Woody honestly. I have no idea how many were made. **5) Dick Williams Harlem Globetrotters animated spot** This animated spot from the mid-70s was used for many years, and really highlights what was especially wonderful about Dick’s studio and animation. Wish I could find a 16mm on this one and do a really nice scan. **6) Mickey Mouse Nash Spots** These always have to be on the list of favorites for me. Again, Mark Kaulser plays a role here, having lent these prints twice to me, once for a standard def scan, then later in HD. Here’s the standard def: Ok— so, now, some of yours! I’m hoping we can all sit back and watch some things we haven’t seen before…

Vintage Commercials! What are some of *your* favorites??!? Here’s a few of my favorites from over the years. I can’t even recall how many times I’ve said things are busy as heck here when wri...

#THUNDERBEAN #THURSDAY #John #Hubley #Mickey #Mouse #Woody #Woodpecker

Origin | Interest | Match

0 0 0 0
Vintage Commercials! What are some of *your* favorites??!? I can’t even recall how many times I’ve said things are busy as heck here when writing here. There’s a bunch to do, and when I’m not really tired I’m having a great time making all these various puzzles come together. I can see a time in the next year where there will be a lot more ability to concentrate on just one or two projects, with help doing others. The Thunderbean MeTV deal is lovely in that there’s about to be a whole lot of people seeing things they’ve never seen before; I love the accessibility of all these films once again finding an audience bigger than the little cartoony community. I really love the channels and their support of classic animation, with even more to come soon. My friend Milton Knight has a Kickstarter up for his independent animated film “Cat and Mouse”. Spread the word and support this film if you’re able. It’s dark subject matter for sure, exploratory and exploring new territory for him as an artist. [Click Here to help]. As we’re working on more licensing and streaming possibilities, we’ll be turning away from the special discs that we’ve had so much fun producing. Several people requested we have them up a few more days, so we’ve done so- and there’s a discount at the shop right now as well at the Thunderbean Shop. [Direct Link] * * * And onto today’s subject: What are some of your favorite vintage animated commercials? I’ve always loved collecting commercials in 16mm. There’s a lot of prints of commercials out there, and they used to be incredibly cheap on the collectors market since people would keep the shows and often cut out the commercial interrupting them, or sell the little boxes and tiny reels with them on, or sell big reels of them. Over the years it’s been fun to borrow a bunch from various collectors as well as mulling through my own collection and scanning the ones I really like. Here’s a few of my favorites from over the years. Find some of yours if you can and put a link in the comments. In this week’s and last week’s animation history class at the College for Creative Studies, we showed quite a few from the Thunderbean commercials set and the _Mid Century Modern_ Blu-rays. It was a lot of fun to see them through their eyes. **1) A Smattering of Spots (Storyboard, Inc)**. This commercial reel from the Huibley Studio is one of my favorite things to show in class. There’s so many styles and so much fun animation by so many people that worked at most of the big animation studios over the years. This is just the standard definition version. It’s on the Mid Century Modern, Volume 2 disc that we’ll get back in print at some point… **2) Coo Coo Wheats commercial (1974)** Mark Kausler animated a big chunk of this spot back in the 70s- and maybe he can tell us a little more about it too! It was a favorite of mine when it showed on WKBD, Channel 50 in Detroit. This copy is from my not-so-great telecine transfer that made it onto the first commecial disc we did- and further compressed from YouTube re-uploading— one of these days I’ll get a better copy! **3) Freakies commercial (1974)** I guess I’m taking a trip back into my childhood a little bit with this one too. Freakies was my absolute favorite for about a year and a half as a kid— then it vanished off the shelves! I still have my Freakies figures and magnets all these years later. This spot was largely animated by Preston Blair at Jack Zander’s Animation Parlor. I have a drawing from the opening shot. **4) Kellogg’s Corn Flakes with Woody Woodpecker** Is there anything better than Woody suggesting children almost get hit by cars in their pursuit of cereal? I wish there were more of these around with Woody honestly. I have no idea how many were made. **5) Dick Williams Harlem Globetrotters animated spot** This animated spot from the mid-70s was used for many years, and really highlights what was especially wonderful about Dick’s studio and animation. Wish I could find a 16mm on this one and do a really nice scan. **6) Mickey Mouse Nash Spots** These always have to be on the list of favorites for me. Again, Mark Kaulser plays a role here, having lent these prints twice to me, once for a standard def scan, then later in HD. Here’s the standard def: Ok— so, now, some of yours! I’m hoping we can all sit back and watch some things we haven’t seen before…

Vintage Commercials! What are some of *your* favorites??!? Here’s a few of my favorites from over the years. I can’t even recall how many times I’ve said things are busy as heck here when wri...

#THUNDERBEAN #THURSDAY #John #Hubley #Mickey #Mouse #Woody #Woodpecker

Origin | Interest | Match

0 0 0 0

I just finished watching a video of an Air Force internal film about computers in Strategic Air Command from the early 1960s.

It was fascinating how the drawn panels & short animated segments were in the Mid-Century Modern style, along with models (static & animated) in #MCM.
#Thunderbean

0 0 0 0
Post image Post image Post image Post image

Honestly, I’m just honored that my name is even featured on a Blu-ray release, no less 😭

#classicanimation #blurays #1950s #vlog #special #thunderbeananimation #thunderbean #thunderbeanshop #classiccartoons #animation #midcentury

9 4 0 0

Watching the Special Set of Forgotten 60's cartoons from #Thunderbean
High Points so far: Love me, Love Me, Love; A Bridge Grows in Brooklyn; The Puppets of Jiří Trnka.
Low Points: Cool Cat-Injun Trouble, and the Sad Cat cartoon.
Cool Cat looks like a bad Hanna Barbera copy.
@jbeck6540.bsky.social

0 0 0 0
Post image

I have been thinking about Goofy Goat Antics (1931) being found in color or any color by Ted Eshbaugh #Thunderbean
#vintagecartoons #oldfilms #lostmedia
This cartoon music has been in my for months and being in color too!!!

0 0 0 0
Revisiting “Wonder Bakers at the World’ Fair” (1939) <p>It’s fun to revisit something you first saw many years ago- and Eshbaugh, to me, is always interesting.</p> <img alt="" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-13040" decoding="async" height="82" sizes="(max-width: 403px) 100vw, 403px" src="https://cartoonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/tb_logo.jpg" srcset="https://cartoonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/tb_logo.jpg 403w, https://cartoonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/tb_logo-300x61.jpg 300w, https://cartoonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/tb_logo-150x30.jpg 150w" width="403"/> <p> </p><p>First, in the Thunderbean land:</p> <p>We’re finishing off sending the current batch of special discs, and starting to prep the next batch. We’ve also launched a new official Blu-ray set called “American cartoons: 1929” The pre-order is at <a href="https://www.thunderbeanshop.com/product/thunderbean-presents-american-animated-cartoons-1929-blu-ray/" target="_blank">the Thunderbean shop</a> for a limited time.</p> <hr style="color: #D3D3D3; background-color: #D3D3D3; height: 2px; border: none;"/> <p><img alt="" class="alignright size-full wp-image-88878" decoding="async" fetchpriority="high" height="187" sizes="(max-width: 275px) 100vw, 275px" src="https://cartoonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Wonder-bakers-frame-300.jpg" srcset="https://cartoonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Wonder-bakers-frame-300.jpg 275w, https://cartoonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Wonder-bakers-frame-300-150x102.jpg 150w" width="275"/>One of the things I love about collecting 16mm films has been all the odd little things that show up.</p> <p>The 1939 World’s Fair seems to be one of those things that a lot of people shot home movies of. A really great reel was just <a href="https://www.ebay.com/itm/116437940016?_skw=16mm+world%27s+fair&amp;itmmeta=01JJ8B5Y8TNGFYWH842ATN0JZH&amp;hash=item1b1c3df730:g:6i4AAOSwfTtnepNp&amp;itmprp=enc%3AAQAJAAAA0HoV3kP08IDx%2BKZ9MfhVJKkCEXswN6M7gRQzrkgTFzF3X4Z48nnFx7OMsE1%2B5Wq9oO62sNFbFnAfnFaT8yjEeL%2BbS95WZ9qwt%2F7lV3XMWhpGEL0MvfQVOQhERe7sOtWUNpXt%2BIQMJbSZ1ICB1NQPUAW%2FlmNRkqhPxt4wtyXAyClgPw5H6ehxSC0kaghjJwPUcCyTG50dsc9K3fB4TUol%2BnxNvbx5aVAKAlLteaaBAbMOW%2BCbLAnMMVtrtHGqh%2BoeLCau01et7PB7jTLW%2Bba0N2c%3D%7Ctkp%3ABk9SR8jkl4uSZQ" target="_blank">auctioned on Ebay</a> a week or so back – scroll down to see some of the pictures:</p> <p>I was thinking a lot this week about different uses for animation other than in theatrical cartoons over the years, and how there’s a much better chance of a lot of this sort of material being lost since it often wasn’t distributed outside of the original exhibit or the like. There’s some films I’ve been working with that were produced for this sort of industrial use, but it got me thinking about one of the first things I posted for Thunderbean Thursday: <em>Wonder Bakers at the World’s Fair</em>. So, now, 20 years after doing the scan of this little film, I thought it would be fun to do an update with what has shown up since on the internet.</p> <p>Back in 2013, <a href="https://cartoonresearch.com/index.php/eshbaugh-ii-wonder-bakers-at-the-world-fair/" target="_blank">I wrote a little post</a> about <em>Wonder Bakers at the World’s Fair</em> (1939) with animation by Ted Eshbaugh, who did lots of this sort of industrial film stuff through the years.</p> <p></p><center><iframe allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" allowfullscreen="" frameborder="0" height="315" referrerpolicy="strict-origin-when-cross-origin" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/K5mtuunYTMw?si=seh_U4MHSdsbvhr1" title="YouTube video player" width="560"></iframe></center> <p> </p><p>Cartoonist and animation expert Mark Kausler has what appears to be a workprint of some (or all?) of the animation from this short, in a fair 16mm Kodachrome print. We own him a debt of gratitude for sharing it. I’m hoping to borrow it again and, using all this fancy new-fangled technology, try to get a little better version from this otherwise lost material. Perhaps if I’m agile enough to catch a lizard or two Mark will let me borrow it again.</p> <p><a href="https://cartoonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Wonder-Bread-Pavillion-1939.jpg" rel="prettyphoto[88871]" target="_blank"><img alt="" class="alignright size-medium wp-image-88880" decoding="async" height="296" loading="lazy" sizes="auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px" src="https://cartoonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Wonder-Bread-Pavillion-1939-300x296.jpg" srcset="https://cartoonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Wonder-Bread-Pavillion-1939-300x296.jpg 300w, https://cartoonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Wonder-Bread-Pavillion-1939-150x148.jpg 150w, https://cartoonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Wonder-Bread-Pavillion-1939-50x50.jpg 50w, https://cartoonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Wonder-Bread-Pavillion-1939.jpg 557w" width="300"/></a>My guess is that the print, at some point, belonged to Eshbaugh himself, since it’s similar in quality to (for a while) the only color print available of Eshbaugh’s <em>Wizard of Oz</em> cartoon. Eshbaugh gave that 16mm Kodachrome reduction print of <em>‘Oz</em>’ to film historian William K Emerson, who had worked for Eshbaugh in New York in the 60s. Many moons later, Everson sold that 16mm print to film collector Tom Toth, who made 16mm prints of it using a better soundtrack (pulled from Jeff Missinne’s good black and white print of the short) and it was the best copy of that film in circulation until we scanned the 35mm Technicolor print at the Library of Congress back in 2014. Toth also sold a lot of public domain cartoons to companies like Goodtimes Home Video and Amvest for the cheap VHS kids tapes so many people grew up with. That is how that version of <em>The Wizard of Oz</em> got circulated. He also sold it to Warner Home Video as a bonus feature for a DVD release of the classic 1939 feature.</p> <img alt="" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-88874" decoding="async" height="466" loading="lazy" sizes="auto, (max-width: 600px) 100vw, 600px" src="https://cartoonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Wonder-bakery-sign0600.jpg" srcset="https://cartoonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Wonder-bakery-sign0600.jpg 600w, https://cartoonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Wonder-bakery-sign0600-300x233.jpg 300w, https://cartoonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Wonder-bakery-sign0600-150x117.jpg 150w" width="600"/> <p> </p><p>There’s a home movie of the ‘Wonder Bakers’ pavilion offered as stock footage at <a href="https://dissolve.com/video/Wonder-Bread-pavilion-1939-New-York-World-Fair-boasts-royalty-free-stock-video-footage/001-D378-38-540" target="_blank">the link below</a>. It’s sort of fun— especially the bizarre scarecrow made out of a female mannequin. The World’s Fair seems both slick and not-so-much sometimes! In the circle of characters there appears to be the John Tenniel designed rabbit from <em>Alice in Wonderland</em>. Seeing the ‘Alice in Wonderland’ theme on the outside makes me wonder why they didn’t use an Alice in Wonderland theme in the animation or larger as part of the theme of the company.</p> <p><a href="https://dissolve.com/video/Wonder-Bread-pavilion-1939-New-York-World-Fair-boasts-royalty-free-stock-video-footage/001-D378-38-540" target="_blank">https://dissolve.com/video/Wonder-Bread-pavilion-1939-New-York-World-Fair-boasts-royalty-free-stock-video-footage/001-D378-38-540</a></p> <p>LOC has a picture and even notes the <em>Alice in Wonderland</em> Characters:</p> <p><a href="https://www.loc.gov/resource/gsc.5a30878/">https://www.loc.gov/resource/gsc.5a30878/</a></p> <p>There’s a nice shot of the characters ‘walking’ at 6:16 in <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J-cZM2Ez8T0">this color footage</a>, posted by Larry Urbanski: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J-cZM2Ez8T0">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J-cZM2Ez8T0</a></p> <p>I wish there was some footage inside the building just to see what it was like. Here’s <a href="https://archive.lib.msu.edu/DMC/tribune/trib00000000/trib000000001143.pdf" target="_blank">a page from the <em>Chicago Sunday Tribune</em></a> (courtesy of Michigan State University) that at least gives some idea of what the tour looked like. I’ll bet the film was displayed from a 16mm print either in a small auditorium setup or back projection on screen.</p> <img alt="" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-88881" decoding="async" height="367" loading="lazy" sizes="auto, (max-width: 600px) 100vw, 600px" src="https://cartoonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Wonder-Bread-Fair1939-illo-600.jpg" srcset="https://cartoonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Wonder-Bread-Fair1939-illo-600.jpg 600w, https://cartoonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Wonder-Bread-Fair1939-illo-600-300x184.jpg 300w, https://cartoonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Wonder-Bread-Fair1939-illo-600-150x92.jpg 150w" width="600"/> <p> </p><p>From all the different home movie footage of the fair, you can get at least some impression of what it was like. </p> <p>(A side note: For fun, look up Dali’s <em>Dream Of Venus</em> to see something truly bizarre.)</p> <p>Have a good week all!</p>

Revisiting “Wonder Bakers at the World’ Fair” (1939) Not quite the greatest thing since ...

cartoonresearch.com/index.php/revisiting-won...

#THUNDERBEAN #THURSDAY #1939 #New #York #World's #Fair #Ted #Eshbaugh #Wonder #Bread

Event Attributes

0 0 0 0