I love cartoons. I'm just a big kid.

I'm not into cartoons. That's the irony of it.

I think we had made 160 'Tom and Jerry' cartoons.

The way people love sci-fi is how I love cartoons.

I don't think of cartoons or comics as being for kids.

I didn't watch cartoons, I was too busy playing football.

My parents were really strict about me not watching cartoons.

I'm a great admirer of cartoons, because I can't do cartoons.

So many cartoons are about real fun, happy-go-lucky simpletons.

The best cartoons have no words at all - just the image pops out.

With Saturday morning cartoons, you've got to start at 6 A.M., right?

I keep waiting, like in the cartoons, for an anvil to drop on my head.

For years, humorous characters in cartoons have been almost exclusively male.

People really love editorial cartoons, and I think publishers understand that.

Cartoons are not real drawings, because they are drawings intended to be read.

My intended audience was everybody. I just want to make cartoons for human beings.

I ran development and programming at Disney TV animation. We did a lot of cartoons.

In cartoons, in movies, time passes differently. There are flashbacks and flashfowards.

We have five children whom I love dearly and have exploited mercilessly for my cartoons.

I used to spend summers in the Czech Republic with my grandmother. I'd watch Czech cartoons.

I went to a catholic public school St Helens and learned English by watching bugs bunny cartoons.

Cartoons have always been an enjoyment to me... a relaxation... I get my ideas from everyday events.

98% of the people who get the magazine say they read the cartoons first - and the other 2% are lying.

I get inspired from all different kinds of places - cartoons, comic books, movies and things like that.

I've never stopped loving cartoons. I loved cartoons as a kid. I can still look at them and enjoy them.

After I had done a handful of cartoons I was satisfied with, I started submitting them to the magazines.

I never got tired of Tom and Jerry, but I did have a dream of doing more with my life than making cartoons.

Instead of cartoons, I was the kid who was watching Food Network, falling asleep to Emeril and Rachael Ray.

I've never really thought about competing with cartoons. If it ever gets to that point, then just shoot me.

Instead of watching cartoons when I was little, I had Russian ballet videos from, like, the 1950s and 1940s.

Cartoons, if you ask me, are the most powerful weapon in today's politics. Balasaheb Thackeray has proved this.

I don t think cartoons are only for kids, but I think kids will love anything as long as it's visually interesting.

I have a daughter and she's the greatest thing that ever happened to me. She gives me a good excuse to watch cartoons.

I don't think there's more than half-a-dozen cartoons that I've been really truly happy with in all the time I've been doing it.

Many of my cartoons are not a belly laugh. I go for nostalgia, the lump in the throat, the tear in the eye, the tug in the heart.

Cartoons ran into trouble when they became too much like real life images. Cartoons had become poor imitations of the real thing.

I consider myself a humanist. Even if I do very dark worlds, I try to make those characters real humans as opposed to just cartoons.

I used cartoons as diaries. I still do. They're my way of figuring out the world, what's happening to me or what I'm thinking about.

I loved animation and cartoons, even when it was not cool when you were in high school. I raced home to see the Bugs Bunny cartoons.

Every week when my batch of weekly cartoons would go to FedEx, it felt like a small miracle. Then in a few days, it's 'Here we go again.'

Walt Disney was a master of the human psychology. His sense of timing, sense of speed. In a sense, those cartoons are like Rorschach tests.

In Roslyn, Pennsylvania, we started our real-life family circus. They provided the inspiration for my cartoons. I provided the perspiration.

I didn't always spell my name Bil. My parents named me Bill, but when I started drawing cartoons on the wall, they knocked the 'L' out of me.

Cartoons are the best stuff on TV. 'Wonder Showzen,' 'Aqua Teen,' 'SpongeBob,' and, of course, 'South Park' - one of the funniest shows ever made.

Being female was just one more way I felt different and weird. I was also a young 'un, and also my cartoons were not like typical 'New Yorker' cartoons.

A lot of people think I'm going to be like someone who's stepped out of one of his own cartoons. And maybe I am. But I sure have a hard time analyzing it.

I think more influential than Emily Dickinson or Coleridge or Wordsworth on my imagination were Warner Brothers, Merrie Melodies, and Loony Tunes cartoons.

If you're an aspiring show maker, and you have the means to sit around for a few months, you should be making funny cartoons and uploading them to the internet.

I used to draw cartoons. I'd just show them to some of my friends, expecting that they were going to appreciate them, that they were going to enjoy reading them.

Joe Barbera's s always complaining that he can't get humor into cartoons anymore. Just do it. You've got your money. Why do they let the networks run their lives?

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