However, the young rooster beat him to it, as he hits Dawg in the head as payback for dumping water on him earlier. Having had enough, an enraged Dawg tries to hit him with a mallet. Dawg emerges battered and bruised and he folds Foghorn into a tiny package and throws him into the well. Foghorn throws it over his shoulder for luck and it lands in the well. When the dog is inside, the fox folds the box into a tiny package, then disguises himself as a swami and sells it as a "lucky charm" to Foghorn, who is on his way to go fishing again. The fox unpacks a "Magic Folding Box" and lures Dawg into it with a bone. Again, seeing no fox, Dawg dumps a whole bucket of water on the little rooster. The young rooster again pulls the alarm, and the fox flees before Dawg arrives. Meanwhile, the fox returns to the henhouse. Foghorn guesses "Roses are red.", pushing the buzzer once, detonating one of two firecrackers in Dawg's mouth (causing him to lose three of his teeth), but Dawg, walking off-camera, grabs the buzzer and guesses the other half of the question, ".and violets are blue!", pressing the buzzer the second time, setting off the other firecracker that he stuffed in Foghorn's mouth. The fox then pretends to be a quiz show host, pushing Foghorn into an isolation booth and asking him the "$64 Million Question", "What poem mentions the colors red and blue?" the fox instructs Foghorn to push a buzzer in the booth when he comes to 'red' and press it again when he comes to 'blue'. Dawg only sees the rooster ringing the bell and assumes he's just thirsty again. Dawg runs back, dragging Foghorn behind him, but again the fox scampers away. The fox heads for the henhouse, but the young rooster rings the alarm again. Foggy likes this idea, so he grabs a shotgun and ties a rope around Dawg's neck and drags him away. When he sees Foghorn Leghorn leave to go fishing, the fox disguises himself and suggests that he go hunting instead and bring the dog with him. Barnyard Dawg arrives, but sees no fox, so he thinks the rooster just rang the bell because he wanted a drink of water. The cartoon also briefly paid homage to the then-wildly popular genre of television quiz shows, particularly The $64,000 Question which, like many other quiz shows of the day, would soon become embroiled in scandal and be taken off the air a year later.Ī fox scampers away from the henhouse when a young rooster rings the alarm bell. The title is a play on the dog breed name " Fox Terrier."īy the time of this cartoon's release, the Stephen Foster song " Camptown Races" has been established as Foghorn Leghorn's theme in other cartoons Foghorn normally hums the verse, but in this cartoon he sings specially-written lyrics about fishing. The cartoon was released on May 11, 1957, and features Foghorn Leghorn and the Barnyard Dawg. Merrie Melodies animated short directed by Robert McKimson.
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