News
Hosted on MSN1mon
Warner Bros. Plans To Demolish Looney Tunes BuildingWarner Bros plans to bulldoze the Looney Tunes' home on the Burbank lot to make space for new HBO shows. Recent actions like removing Looney Tunes content from Max hint that Warner Bros may be ...
The “Looney Tunes” building will no longer have a home on the Warner Bros. lot in Burbank, as it will be demolished to make way for HBO productions.
In a recent interview with Puck, HBO and Max Content CEO Casey Bloys discussed the mission statement for the streaming ...
1mon
Comic Book Resources on MSNWarner Bros. Quietly Burying 95 Years of Animation History Makes Even Less Sense 2 Weeks Later (But It's Good News for Looney Tunes Fans)Warner Bros. has caused a lot of confusion with the Looney Tunes brand recently, by first removing the cartoons from Max and now a new movie.
Fans of the Looney Tunes cartoons have been left disappointed following Warner Bros.' decision to demolish the building that housed the iconic animated series. Deadline exclusively reported on ...
PREVIOUS: A little cartoon history is about to be history on the Warner Bros. lot: the studio is razing the single-story building where Looney Tunes was once housed. Deadline understands that ...
Fans outraged as entirety of Looney Tunes removed from Max amid release of The Day the Earth Blew Up
Warner Bros. has removed Looney Tunes from the Max streaming platform, continuing a pattern of content removals that started in October 2024. Along with Looney Tunes, other popular shows like Ben ...
The single-story Warner Bros building where Looney Tunes was once housed is being demolished. According to Deadline, Building 131 will be torn down to create space for several HBO shows that are ...
The Looney Tunes film Coyote vs. Acme won’t be rotting away in David Zaslav’s basement for the next 50 years. Warner Bros. Discovery has sold the rights to the movie to Ketchup Entertainment, the same ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results