02/11/2026
🤠 Let's talk about Tex Avery, the wild, rule-breaking genius behind your favorite cartoons. Imagine the golden age of animation—now picture someone coming in, ripping up the rulebook, and making everything funnier, faster, and twice as insane. That was Tex.
Working at Warner Bros. and MGM from the '30s to the '50s, he didn't just direct cartoons; he injected them with pure, chaotic energy. While he didn’t single-handedly create every icon, he's the one who gave them their unforgettable spark. He helped shape Bugs Bunny's cool-guy smirk, Daffy Duck's unhinged greed, and Porky Pig's stammering charm. And over at MGM, he dreamed up his own legendary crew: the deadpan Droopy, the manic Screwy Squirrel, and the unforgettable Red Hot Riding Hood.
What made a "Tex Avery cartoon" so special? You knew it in seconds:
Physics? Optional. Characters would stretch like taffy, smash flat as a pancake, or shoot off-screen with their eyes popping out.
The jokes came at you a mile a minute, with winks to the audience and gags that were smart, sly, and often surprisingly grown-up.
It was all about the "take"—that over-the-top, jaw-dropping reaction that made you laugh out loud.
In short, Tex Avery taught cartoons how to be truly, hilariously modern. He turned animation into a playground of exaggerated mayhem, and every funny cartoon you've loved since owes a little something to his wild, wonderful vision.