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Speedy Gonzalez - Banned in the USA
Hispanic Online ^ | 3/27/02 | VIRGINIA CUETO

Posted on 03/27/2002 4:37:53 PM PST by Tumbleweed_Connection

From Warner Bros.’ Oscar-nominated Mexicali Shmoes, 1959:

Two Mexican gatos relax atop a bridge, where, wearing floppy sombreros, they enjoy a view of the placid, picture-perfect pueblo; José cat strums his guitar and sings as his compañero, Manuel, croons along. Suddenly… “¡Arriba, arriba, arriba, ándale, ándale, olé, olé, olé, ándale! – Hello, pussycats, you looking for a nice fat mouse for deenner?”

Manuel pounces, unsuccessfully.

Manuel - (bewildered) – “Andale, pues, pronto, pronto, el ratito…”

José – (shaking head) – “Ah, no… It’s no use, Manuel. This mouse fellow, he’s Speedy Gonzales.”

Manuel – “Speedy Gonzales? Who’s he?”

José – “Speedy Gonzales, he’s the fastest mouse in all Méjico. You don’t catch heem with the feets, you got to catch heem with ze brains.”

Manuel – “Brains? Where we get zees brains?”

José – (laughing) – “You don’t need no brains, I gotta ze brains. Come with me. We get thees Gonzales fellow…”

Like those Mexicali gatos, many cartoon fans would love to catch Speedy too. But nowadays, they’d need more luck than brains.

The veteran Looney Tunes hero, star of more than 40 cartoon shorts and winner of an Academy Award—for 1955’s Speedy Gonzales, his second outing co-starring Sylvester, the “greengo” pussycat—has been all but retired from the airwaves in the United States.

Since the late nineties, Speedy has been noticeably absent from the Cartoon Network’s daytime and prime time lineup, apparently for fear of offending Mexican Americans. And aficionados have launched a campaign to get him back, alerting other fans to join a letter-writing campaign to request that Cartoon Network restore Speedy to its rotation.

The decision seems to be a preemptive move on the part of Cartoon Network, which now owns the exclusive rights to all Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons. [The Cartoon Network did not respond to several calls from HispanicOnline.] Jon Cooke, who runs the Unofficial Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies Page, said he had received many e-mails about the absence of Speedy from such Cartoon Network shows as the Looney Tunes Show, Acme Hour, and the Bugs and Daffy Show.

“I get e-mail from cartoon fans all over the world, and in the five years I have been running my page I have yet to receive an e-mail from anyone who finds Speedy offensive,” Cooke said.

But CN officials say the network was instructed by its owner, Ted Turner, to stop showing the Speedy cartoons because of racial stereotyping.

“The problem with [Speedy cartoons] is the references to drinking, laziness, drug use, and womanizing (‘Speedy knows my sister, Speedy knows EVERYBODY’s sister…’),” according to Daniel Wineman, of the Cartoon Network Programming department, in a recent e-mail posted by Jon Cooke on his site.

“This isn’t worse than most any other WB character. However, since Speedy is Mexican, we’ve shied away from these ‘toons. Turner Broadcasting has always been super-careful not to promulgate any of these stereotypes and this case is no different.”

As Wineman points out, Speedy is only one in a list of now-controversial cartoons that have been archived. Reflecting changing notions of political correctness, many older cartoons rarely, if ever, now get television airplay, including the “censored eleven,” an infamous group of shorts focusing on black stereotypes.

Other censored cartoons include those with Indians, and cartoons from the WWII era, such as the Bugs Bunny short Bugs Nips the Nips, which has spurred protest from Japanese groups.

Speedy fans point out that the character itself is not the problem. “I think it’s mainly the OTHER Mexican mice in the cartoons that they are afraid of and not loveable Speedy,” says one fan identified as “snowpeck” on the Termite Terrace Trading Board, a message board for cartoon fans. “What they don’t realize is that Speedy breaks this stereotype by being a smart, hardworking, fast Mexican.”

Not to mention big-hearted. Endowed with street smarts that match his lightning speed, Speedy has a strong sense of justice and a healthy sense of humor. He can always be relied on to come to the rescue, despite his amorous pursuits:

(Mexican mouse #1: “You know Speedy Gonzales? Weel you get heem?”

Mouse #2: “Sí, I know Speedy Gonzales. I weel get heem. Speedy Gonzales, in love with my seester.”

Mouse #1: “Speedy Gonzales, in love weeth EVERYBODY’s seester!”)

His people’s protector—Speedy drags his mouse friends home if he thinks they’ve had too much to drink, and keeps an eye out for gatos and other predators who intrude on the mice’s home turf—it’s no wonder all the mouse señoritas swoon over Speedy.

Which brings us to another facet of this toon hero: Like other Hollywood Latino lovers, the chivalrous Speedy cannot resist the charm of a dropped hankie, a proffered flower, or brown-eyed glances from behind a demure fan.

(A crafty gato cooks up a contraption sure to snare Speedy and leaves it outside Speedy’s window. To catch Speedy’s attention, he attaches a note to the “present,” signed “Your loving Lupe.” Enter Speedy. Reads note. “Ah… A present from my loving Lupe. Such a sweet Lupe… I wonder which loving Lupe eet ees?”)

But lets face it. Speedy is not the only ethnic character in toon town to fall prey to Cupid’s arrows. There’s Pepe LePew, Warner Bros.’ debonair French skunk, whose defining characteristic is his penchant for falling in love and who continues to be featured regularly in CN programming.

And what say you to Disney’s Pepe Carioca, that samba-dancing, cigar-smoking, wordly parrot who guides an innocent Donald Duck through the ins and outs of Brazilian culture in 1945’s The Three Caballeros? Heck, even Droopy, MGM’s laconic and all-American basset hound, brightened up at the prospect of a date with a Latin señorita, although he must have had some Latino blood in him, judging from his many appearances as a torero.

Which all seems kind of harmless in light of the current revival of rambunctious—and often explicitly sexy—cartoons in the spirit of the golden (read pre-television) era of animated shorts, crafted for projection in movie theaters and meant to appeal to all ages. Cerebral slapstick, double-entendre, parodies of political figures, celebrities, and other entertainment genres were the norm.

We’re not talking skits the like of Comedy Central’s South Park, or MTV’s Beavis and Butthead, designed exclusively for an older audience.

We mean the kind of intellectual irreverence, always a staple of classic cartoon humor, that is experiencing a renaissance as producers seek to engage adults, as well as today’s more savvy youngsters, with such animated features as the Toy Story series and DreamWorks’ most recent release, Shrek.

But it was the release of 1988’s Academy Award-winning Who Framed Roger Rabbit? which brought back the feel of the 1940s cartoon heyday and put toons on a par, both intellectually and emotionally, with their human co-stars.

The storyline hinges on a heartbroken Roger Rabbit despairing over his wife Jessica’s rumored infidelity—(And Ted Turner is worried about a Mexican mouse with a soft spot for the señoritas?) Who can forget buxom, throaty voiced Jessica (“I’m not bad, I’m just drawn that way”) agreeing to play patty-cake with lecherous gagman Marvin Acme to save Roger’s screen career? In classic film noir style, the plot also features murder, bribery, a private eye driven to drink, and seedy underworld cabaret scenes.

.It’s also shock-full of cartoon gags. Most interestingly, the film presents the ‘toons as minority contract workers subjugated by the animation studios, which keep them under control and segregated in Toontown.

This portrayal of cartoon characters as entities with a life of their own, subject to the same trials and tribulations as humans, provides an interesting basis for their enduring appeal. Mexican American comedian Adrián Villegas uses it as a vantage point from which to explore the figure of Speedy, one of six characters he portrays in his bilingual one-man show, “Six Mexicans Named González,” his take on the Mexican and Chicano experience.

“I depict him as nothing like the character in the cartoons, but rather illustrate that Speedy (his stage name) is actually a suave Ricardo Montalban-like mouse thespian who immigrated from Mexico and was only playing a part—but a part he cared deeply about,” said Villegas, who sees Speedy as a symbol of minority rebellion and subversive anti-establishment politics within the Latino, and specifically the Mexican American, community. Excerpt: "Six Mexicans Named González"

Wild Wacky World

“The monologue is done tongue-in-cheek,” he said, while pointing out that “it celebrates the Speedy Gonzales character rather than condemning it. It tells the rags-to-riches tale of Speedy’s struggles with racism in Hollywood and what it was like dealing with the double stigma of being Mexican AND a rodent,” said Villegas, who dons a sombrero, mouse ears, and mouse tail to impersonate Speedy on stage.

“For the record, I love Speedy Gonzales. I did the monologue because I feel he was a character ahead of his time, and possibly the ONLY positive Latino character for several decades,” Villegas emphasized.

The character remains immensely popular. He continues to appear on official Warner Bros. Looney Tunes merchandise and was featured on Rhino Records’ Looney Tunes Kwazy Christmas, released this past holiday season, as well as snagging a cameo role alongside Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Michael Jordan in 1996’s Space Jam.

He also stars in an adventure game for Nintendo’s Game Boy Color, in which, as in many of his cartoons, he is called on to save his more vulnerable mice friends from the greedy clutches of Sylvester. But, the manufacturers warn, the item can only be delivered within the European Union and several additional countries listed—which do not include the United States.

In fact, although originally directed not to play Speedy cartoons, Cartoon Network programmers are reconsidering, and Speedy has been sighted—albeit in the wee hours of the morning—in recent CN programming, apparently in response to complaints from Speedy’s fans, according to Matthew Hunter, who runs Matthew Hunter’s Unofficial Speedy Gonzales Page on the Web.

“Now that there have been some shakeups in the Warner conglomerate, Turner has lost his previously iron grip on his TV channels, and because of it, CN has made an effort to show what they’ve been able to get approved,” Hunter explained.

The Speedy cartoon canon includes not only the Academy Award winning Speedy Gonzales, but three other Oscar nominees: Tabasco Road (1957), Mexicali Schmoes (1959), and The Pied Piper of Guadalupe (1961).

While most often paired with Sylvester and Daffy, Speedy also shared billing with such other classic Warner toon stars as Yosemite Sam, Granny, and Tweety Bird. Often, his sidekick was his “cousin” Slowpoke Rodríguez, the slowest mouse in all Méjico, who, despite lacking Speedy’s quick wit and fleet foot, was just as formidable an opponent.

One of Warner Bros.’ most popular characters through the 1980s, second only to Daffy Duck and Bugs Bunny, Speedy was teamed with the Roadrunner for 1965’s The Wild Chase, in which Sylvester and Wile E. Coyote pursue—Should we add “fruitlessly”?—their respective nemeses during an arranged race between Speedy and Roadrunner. (By the way, do you know which of our speeding heroes crossed the finish line first?)

Despite Speedy’s auspicious beginning, experts agree that later Speedy shorts are of inferior quality, another reason why CN has shied from airing them, according to CN programmer Daniel Wineman. Nevertheless, the character’s popularity endures. His limited reappearance on the Cartoon Network’s cartoon rotation has fans exulting and feeling vindicated.

“Speedy is back! Now let’s see if the Hispanics complain,” crowed a Speedy fan on the Termite Terrace Trading Post message board in April.

“Why would they?” wrote back another. “They never did to my knowledge when Nick[elodeon] showed all those Speedy cartoons. I think sometimes the censors are afraid of things that aren’t really there.”


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: banned; racialstereotyping; speedygonzalez
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To: ChefKeith

LOL!
I think I saw that thread way back when!
Not much has changed, only they names of the principals!


81 posted on 08/07/2005 8:49:16 PM PDT by gracie1 (Visualize whirled peas!)
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To: gracie1

The good thread has been deleted-

"You know your addicted to Freerepublic when...?"

I looked for it last week:(


82 posted on 08/07/2005 9:03:19 PM PDT by ChefKeith (If Diplomacy worked, then we would be sitting here talking.)
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To: Buckeroo
Yeah, and if you remember Yosemite Sam, he no longer has a firearm or bullets.

Great Horny Toads!! Those politically-correct censors are really a bunch of rackin' frackin' varmints (Ah hates varmints)!

83 posted on 08/07/2005 9:09:56 PM PDT by Cloud William (Liberals are the crabgrass in the lawn of life.)
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